Wikipedia is increasingly being used as a source in the world press—articles citing Wikipedia have been published in Argentina, Australia, Austria, Canada, Ethiopia, Germany, India, Indonesia, Iran, Ireland, Israel, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Russia, Serbia and Montenegro, Singapore, Switzerland, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States and Uruguay.

Note: This is not a complete list.

January

January 1–10

"Wikipedia puts the price of a fresh kidney at about $125,000 US dollars."
"Shinseki's own statement is that he was forced into retirement "(ref: www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Shinseki)."
"Wikipedia, an online reference source, reports that rose perfumes are made from attar of roses or rose oil, which is a mixture of volatile essential oils obtained by steam-distilling the crushed petals of roses. Nowadays some 70 to 80 percent of production is in the so-called Valley of Roses near Kazanluk in Bulgaria. About 2,000 flowers are required to produce one gram of oil."
"A list of 106 links in more than a dozen nations is available at Wikipedia, the free encylopaedia site."
Cites Wikipedia articles (Haj Amin Al-Husseini, Sherif Hussein bin Ali, Rashid Ali al-Kaylani) several times.
Uses Wikipedia as a "related link" on a sidebar to accompany an article about job-related blogs.
Quotes article on warez.
"Sauerkraut, according to Wikipedia.com, the free encyclopedia, literally translates from the German to sour cabbage. It is finely sliced white cabbage fermented with lactobacillus bacteria. The sugars in the cabbage are then converted into lactic acid and act as a preservative."
"Without warning, the screen went deep blue. (Echos of Windows's classic Blue Screen of Death.)"—article has external link to the Blue Screen of Death article
Cites Faurisson affair.
"Both parents [of Alberto Gonzales] were children of migrants from Mexico with less than a high-school education themselves, according to the Wikipedia encyclopedia."
Beginner's Guide:
Wikipedia: Spamming: "This article provides a general overview of the spamming phenomenon including the techniques of spammers and ways to stop e-mail abuse."
Wikipedia: Spyware: "Get basic definitions of adware, spyware, and malware, their consequences, and how to fight them."

January 11–20

Includes Same sex marriage in Canada as a link for further information.

January 21–31

February

February 1–10

February 11–28

IN HIS Feb. 13 column, "Sgro took last kick at the can," Peter Worthington quotes the Nazi war crime researcher and chronicler Simon Wiesenthal as having stated "prior to his death" that any Nazi war criminals of significance would now be too old and infirm to stand trial. I took the liberty of checking the Internet encyclopedia Wikipedia for confirmation of this. Mr. Wiesenthal did say this in April 2003 upon his retirement. However, there is no mention of Mr. Wiesenthal having died.

March

March 1-10

March 11-20

March 21-31

April

April 1-10

"Phishing is defined by the Wikipedia as the act of attempting to fraudulently acquire through deception sensitive personal information such as passwords and credit card details by masquerading in an official-looking email, IM, etc. as someone trustworthy with a real need for such information."
"Wikipedia credits sociologist Robert K. Merton -- best known for having coined the phrases "self-fulfilling prophecy" and "role model" among others -- with coming up with "the Law of unintended consequences," which "holds that almost all human actions have at least one unintended consequence. In other words, each cause has more than one effect including unforeseen effects.""
"According to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'Self-determination is a principle in international law that a people ought to be able to determine their own governmental forms and structure free from outside influence.'"
"Vi må renske sporten fra denne hooliganismen hjemme, så kan vi kanskje dra utenlands igjen, sa statsministeren Margaret Thatcher, som tok grep om opprydningen."

April 11-21

"A far more extensive discussion of the Bayes Rule and its general implications can be found on the Wikipedia (Bayes'_Theorem)."
"...online grassroots encyclopaedia Wikipedia compares podcasts to online audio magazine subscriptions."
"According to Wikipedia, television networks in at least 48 out of 51 countries around the world name the title of the show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? in their own local languages."

Electors Gather to Pick a Pope; The process is secret, but jockeying beforehand is noticeable. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the chief doctrinal monitor, may be an early favorite." Los Angeles Times. April 18, 2005.

Of many cited sources at bottom - wikipedia is one
"Wikipedia outlines the advantages: software integration issues are eliminated from the client site; software costs for the application are spread over a number of clients; and vendors can build more application experience than in-house staff.
"It also mentions the disadvantages: the client must generally accept the application as provided since ASPs can only afford a customised solution for the largest clients; the client may rely on the provider to provide a critical business function, thus limiting their ability to handle that function to that of the provider; continuing consolidation of ASP providers may cause changes in the type or level of service available."
"18 The Number of Grammys [Michael] Jackson has won. (Wikipedia) | 300 Million. The estimated number of albums Jackson has sold. (Wikipedia)"

April 22-30

May

May 1-10

  • "So-called "polydactyls" may have six or more digits on either their hands or feet or both, an inherited condition, says Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia."
  • "The invicta in the scientific name [of red imported fire ants] means 'unconquerable,' and these ants are so resilient, according to the wikipedia online dictionary, that if you flood the nest, the ants will huddle around their queen and create a water-resistant ball. Then they float away."
  • "it's not all that important to understand the ins and outs of the RSS protocol (though if you want to know more, Wikipedia is a good place to start)". Article links to RSS (protocol), which redirects to RSS (file format).
  • "Many traditions make May Day special. A quick survey of Wikipedia.com yields many of them. For instance, there's the popular 'maypole,' and the dancing that goes with it. Magdalen College in England still follows elaborate May Day traditions including singing from rooftops. However, according to Wikipedia.com, revelers have ceased the once-common practice of throwing of red-hot coins from the top of a building to a crowd of people below. I, for one, hope we can revive that one, perhaps using collectible mint state Quarters."
  • "We're even sprinkling it with links."
  • "Source: Wikipedia, GlassOnWeb.com"

May 11-20

May 20-31

Much of the story plagiarised without attribution from Margaret, Duchess of Argyll

June

June 1-10

June 11-20

Used as a suggested reading on Taoism, Zen, and Buddhism.
"The online encyclopedia Wikipedia notes that one interpretation of quantum theory - Everett's "many worlds" interpretation of 1956 - says all the possibilities it describes "simultaneously occur in a 'multiverse' composed of mostly independent parallel universes"."

June 21-30

"The rider leading a classification at the end of a stage is entitled to wear the corresponding jersey during the next stage. Jerseys are awarded in a ceremony immediately following the stage, actually before trailing riders have finished the stage..."

July

July 1–10

I found the story at this URL: [158]. A story about Sandra Day O'Connor includes a paragraph that begins with a link to our article on Kelo v. New London but doesn't otherwise comment on Wikipedia. The paragraph mentions that O'Connor presided at the oral argument (a fact that's in our article) and adds that it was the first time a woman had presided at a Supreme Court argument (which isn't in our article but perhaps should be). JamesMLane 4 July 2005 08:38 (UTC)

July 11–20

July 21–30

August

August 1–10

August 11–20

August 21–30

Listed as a source at the bottom of the column

September

September 1–10

September 11–20

September 21–30

October

October 1–10

Quotes the electric shock article extensively.
"The free online community encyclopedia, Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org) started a page (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_Bali_bombings) within a few hours of last Saturday's Bali bombings."
References at the end of the article include Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon".

October 11–20

October 21–31

  • Fold-out section in "G2" supplement. Authors and editors critique articles in their fields of expertise. Includes comment by Robert McHenry, former editor-in-chief of Encyclopedia Britannica. Article ratings: Steve Reich 7/10, Haute couture 0/10, Basque people 7/10, TS Eliot 6/10, Samuel Pepys 6/10, Bob Dylan 8/10, Encyclopedia 5/10. The founder of the online encyclopedia written and edited by its users has admitted some of its entries are 'a horrific embarrassment'. What did our panel of experts think of the entries for their fields?

November

November 1–10

No exact quote available; cites existance of Jeff Provine article as quality of author (article deleted in Aug. 2005)

November 11–20

"According to a Wikipedia article: "He then worked briefly as a lecturer at his alma mater, University College, Trivandrum (1943). However the appointment, customary for students who showed distinction...
...at the request of the university."

November 21–27

November 29-30

"According to www.Wikipedia.org, the first (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles) movie was also the highest grossing independent film of all time when it was released — it earned $133 million at the box office."
The former aide to Robert F. Kennedy, John Seigenthaler, responds to finding serious false claims in his own article and recounts his contact with Jimmy Wales over the issue.
Quote: While some Hindus are as proudly anti- gay as their counterparts in other churches, accepted Hindu religious texts do not explicitly mention homosexuality at all and, according to Wikipedia, "to this day in modern India there are hijras, transgendered men who have sex with men. They religiously identify as a separate third sex, with many undergoing ritual castration. In Hindu thought, a man who penetrates a hijra is not defined as gay."
Although the exact article is not cited, it appears to be from Homosexuality and Hinduism

December

December 1–8

In response to the inaccurate edits made to a WP article on John Seigenthaler, reported in USA Today on November 29 (see above), The Register reviews case studies where it claims Wikipedia policies have been erratically applied.

December 9–16

"It's been such a big hit that the format now airs in 38 countries, including the Netherlands, Algeria, Argentina, Chile, Israel, Mexico, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Russia, Thailand, Germany, Austria, the United Kingdom, the United States, Tunisia, Romania, Poland and India, according to Wikipedia.com."
A peer review of Wikipedia articles on science by the UKs Nature magazine found that they are marginally inferior to equivalent articles in the Encyclopædia Britannica. The average rate of mistakes in forty-two sampled articles in Wikipedia was approximately four against three in Britannica. See also Wikipedia:External peer review/Nature December 2005 article.

December 17–24

This story didn't originally attribute quotes to Wikipedia article Aloha Flight 243; however, a correction was posted on 24 December 2005. See details at User:TenOfAllTrades/Aloha Dupe