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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 29 January 2025. Web technique For information about short URLs for pages on Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:URLShortener. This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find ...
Moved 426 links to a new URL. Discovered 426 ghost redirects. Removed 13 {{dead link}}. Added 28 {{dead link}}. Switched 396 |url-status=dead to live. Switched 1 |url-status=live to dead. Added 12 archive URLs (4 Wayback). Changed 8 citation metadata. Pass 2: Checked 774 pages and edited 141 pages. Moved 126 links to a new URL. Discovered 126 ...
Mohamed Kahlain, co-founder of GooL.li, announced that he did not want to sue Qwant and said that he was not aware of the interface change. In March 2017, Qwant, through the Open Internet Project, of which it is a member, accused Google of anti-competitive practices and filed a complaint with the European Commission in Brussels.
With URL redirects, incoming links to an outdated URL can be sent to the correct location. These links might be from other sites that have not realized that there is a change or from bookmarks/favorites that users have saved in their browsers. The same applies to search engines. They often have the older/outdated domain names and links in their ...
This page in a nutshell: Wikipedia requires inline citations for any material challenged or likely to be challenged, and for all quotations. If you are new to editing and just need a general overview of how sources work, please visit the referencing for beginners help page.
- Note that Table 2 appears to refer only to articles created in August 2024, so the absence of links in the 2022 dataset would not be a problem here. But yes, one could ask why they didn't vet their conclusion that AI-generated [Wikipedia articles] use fewer references and are less integrated into the Wikipedia nexus by calculating the same ...
The elements of the RSS vocabulary are not generally reusable in other XML vocabularies. The Atom syntax was specifically designed to allow elements to be reused outside the context of an Atom feed document. For instance, it is not uncommon to find atom:link elements being used within RSS 2.0 feeds.
They demonstrated a visual secret sharing scheme, where a binary image was broken up into n shares so that only someone with all n shares could decrypt the image, while any n − 1 shares revealed no information about the original image. Each share was printed on a separate transparency, and decryption was performed by overlaying the shares.