This page is for recording the results of Wiki Loves Pride 2014.
Project Growth
Reports
If an event or campaign was held in your city, please share the results of the activity here. Feel free to include venue details, the number of attendees, the number of articles created and/or improved, images uploaded or added to articles, pictures taken at the meetup, local press coverage, planned follow-up activities, and any other anecdotal information worth sharing!
Atlanta
Houston
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Pride (2008)
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Pride (2013)
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Pride (2013)
India
Wiki Loves Pride, India was held during July 2014, culminating with offline events in Bangalore, Delhi and Mangalore on July 19.
Philadelphia
As part of an all-day event, A GLAM Day Out, guest archivist Bob Skiba, LGBT archivist at the William Way LGBT Center in Philadelphia, talked about LGBT history in Philadelphia and about some very exciting initiatives. Over the next year there will be a number of LGBT-related exhibits at different galleries, libraries, and museums in the Philadelphia area including Constitution Center, the Mutter Museum, the Library Company of Philadelphia and more. The LGBT archives have also received a grant funding a substantial expansion, doubling their space and installing climate control and other features at the archives.
A dozen people attended the afternoon's "Wiki Loves Pride" editing event, creating 2 new articles and editing others. One of the new articles is for the Anna Crusis Women's Choir, the first feminist choir in the United States, which has been active in supporting LGBT rights and other social justice causes. Photographs relating to the forty-year history of the choir are being released as we obtain the appropriate permissions to cover their licensing.
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Bob Skiba, guest archivist
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Anna Crusis Women's Choir concert poster, June 14, 1980
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Anna Crusis Women's Choir concert poster, 1995, with Pete Seeger and Reggie Harris
Portland, Oregon
- Date/Time: Saturday, June 21, 2014 from noon–4pm
- Venue: Smith Memorial Student Union, Room 236 (Portland State University)
- There were just a handful of us present, but we managed to create a few articles Cascade AIDS Project, Embers Avenue, LGBT culture in Portland, Oregon, Peacock in the Park, Q Center, Salem Capital Pride, Second Foundation) and discuss potential projects for Reed College and/or Wikimedia Cascadia. One new contributor uploaded original photographs of Reed College (specifically Reed Canyon and fungi), and User:Another Believer and User:Blurpeace used the Flickr-to-Commons tool to upload images of Renn Fayre and Seattle Pride (2012). User:Grand'mere Eugene created LGBT culture in Eugene, Oregon remotely. Silverado was created later in the month.
- See also: Seattle Pride 2012 (331 images); Renn Fayre (11 images)
- "Pride PDX" was a month-long campaign to photograph Portland's LGBT culture and history. 145 pictures of the Pride Parade (see Portland Pride 2014) were uploaded, as were several photographs of Q Center and Portland State University's Queer Resource Center.
New York City
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Stonewall Inn
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Stonewall Inn
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A condom raincoat by artist
Ai Weiwei
San Francisco
Seattle
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Pride 2012
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Pride 2012
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Pride 2012
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Pride 2012
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Pride 2014
Seoul
In South Korea, nearly 50 images of Seoul's Korea Queer Culture Festival were uploaded. Commons photo challenge submissions include:
South Africa
- Date/Time: Saturday, June 21, 2014
- Venue: De Waterkant, Cape Town
- South Africa's pride season takes place earlier in the year during the summer, hence a focus on LGBT culture instead of pride events. Over 60 images of De Waterkant, a gay village in Cape Town, taken on 21 June 2014 were uploaded and a Commons gallery page was created to display them. The following selection was submitted to the Commons photo challenge:
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Crew nightclub
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Boyztown
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Beefcakes Burger Bar
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Café Manhattan
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Kos restaurant
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Dixon Street
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Waterkant Street
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Loader Street
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Jarvis Street
Vancouver
- Nearly 25 images were uploaded, illustrating Pride 2009, Pride 2013 and Davie Village
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Pride 2009
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Pride 2009
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Pride 2013
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Pride 2013
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Pride 2013
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Davie Village
Vienna
- Nearly 50 images from Life Ball 2014 were uploaded
Warsaw
Washington, D.C.
New Content
- A Girl Named Mahmoud, Egyptian LGBT-related film (1975)
- AIDS Foundation Houston
- AIDS United
- Matt Alber, singer-songwriter
- Anna Crusis Women's Choir (Pennsylvania)
- Arizona Kid, novel by Ron Koertge (1998)
- Art and Queer Culture (2013)
- Beijing Queer Chorus
- Maria Zilda Bethlem, Brazilian actress
- Dana Beyer, transgender politician from Maryland
- Victor Blackwell, American journalist
- Bloomsbury Group in LGBT history
- Barrie Jean Borich, LGBT writer
- Bunnies on the Bayou, annual event in Houston, Texas
- Salem Capital Pride
- Cascade AIDS Project, Portland, Oregon
- Chances Bar, lesbian bar in Houston, Texas
- Cincinnati Pride
- Tim Coco
- Columbus Pride
- De Leon v. Perry (2014)
- Egalia, a gender-neutral preschool in Sweden
- Embers Avenue, Portland, Oregon
- Darryl Foster, American activist
- Michiyo Fukaya, feminist poet and activist
- Brenda Sue Fulton
- Gay & Lesbian Switchboard of New York
- Gay Liberation Monument, New York City
- Joe Gulla
- Lee Gye-deok, South Korean singer and activist
- Kakan Hermansson, Swedish artist, comedian, radio/TV host
- Hvaler (TV series), Norwegian drama television series
- Margaret Catherine Alice Hyson
- Illinois Department of Human Rights
- Tamar Iveri, Georgian opera singer; contains a section about the 2013 Tbilisi anti-homophobia rally protests
- Matt Kailey, trans male author and activist
- Kicked Out (book)
- Tomasz Kitliński
- Tamai Kobayashi, LGBT writer
- Korea Queer Culture Festival
- Der Kreis, defunct Swiss LGBT magazine
- Labrisz Lesbian Association (Hungary)
- Latta v. Otter
- LGBT culture in Boston
- LGBT culture in Eugene, Oregon
- LGBT culture in Houston
- LGBT culture in Metro Detroit
- LGBT culture in Philadelphia
- LGBT culture in Portland, Oregon
- LGBT in the Middle East
- LGBT writers in the Dutch-language area
- Eli Lieb, openly gay singer-songwriter
- List of Bloomsbury Group people
- "The Littlest Victims"
- Lawrence Lockman, American lobbyist and activist; known for making controversial statements about HIV and homosexuality
- Luis Negrón, LGBT writer
- Roy Ngerng
- Nuuk Pride, LGBT festival in Greenland
- Original Plumbing, magazine focused on transgender men
- Peacock in the Park, annual event in Portland, Oregon
- Q Center, LGBT community center in Portland, Oregon
- Rupert Raj
- Ramon Sandin, LGBT diver and actor
- Saraswati Park, 2010 novel
- Lauren Scott, transgender politician from Nevada
- Second Foundation (Oregon)
- Sex Tips for Straight Women from a Gay Man
- Peggy Shaw, lesbian actress
- Jonathan Shurberg
- Silverado (gay bar), Portland
- David Stainton, American film and television executive
- Statue of Gertrude Stein
- The Stonewall Celebration Concert, 1994 album by Renato Russo
- Ngahuia Te Awekotuku, lesbian activist
- Timeline of LGBT history in New York City
- Dan C. Tsang, American activist
- Larry Uttal
- Valancourt Books, LGBT book publishing company
- "Variable and Full of Perturbation", TV episode introducing a transgender character
- Jackie Walker (American football, born 1950)
- Lex Watson, Australian LGBT rights activist and historian
- Jörn Weisbrodt, German arts administrator
- White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault
- Women's reproductive health in Russia
Policies and Proposals
In response to calls for online privacy by a few editors who live in countries where support for LGBT issues is a cultural and political taboo, a proposal to create exemptions for open proxy editing with Tor has been developed.
When Wikimedia community members are targeted for harassment and cyberbullying due to their participating in Wikimedia community projects, the community should support the victims even when it is not possible or reasonable to address the attacker.
Articles Expanded or Improved
Photography
Photography campaigns were hosted in a handful of locations around the world, including Portland (Oregon), Seoul, South Africa and Vancouver. In addition, Wikimedia Commons hosted an LGBT photo challenge during June, in conjunction with Wiki Loves Pride. Highlights:
Wikidata
Logo of Wikidata's LGBT task force
Wikidata is a free knowledge base that can be read and edited by humans and machines alike. It is for data what Wikimedia Commons is for media files: it centralizes access to and management of structured data, such as interwiki references and statistical information. Wikidata contains data in every language supported by the MediaWiki software.
June 2014 saw the creation of the LGBT task force at Wikidata, which seeks to improve LGBT-related content. In addition to the creation of this new group, a report was created which consists of people who have been identified as LGBT at English Wikipedia, but not at Wikidata. This is one of several projects being discussed by task force members. 10 users joined the LGBT task force in June 2014.