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This page is used for technical questions relating to the tools, gadgets, or other technical issues about Commons; it is distinguished from the main Village pump, which handles community-wide discussion of all kinds. The page may also be used to advertise significant discussions taking place elsewhere, such as on the talk page of a Commons policy. Recent sections with no replies for 30 days and sections tagged with {{Section resolved|1=--~~~~}} may be archived; for old discussions, see the archives; recent archives: /Archive/2024/04 /Archive/2024/05.

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Cat-a-lot does not work for categories edit

There seems to be a technical problem with Help:Gadget-Cat-a-lot: when I click on Preferences, click on "Allow categorising pages (including categories) that are not files", then select one or more subcategories and try to move/copy/delete them to/from another category (like I always do), nothing happens but an endless "Editing page 1 of X". Moving files is no problem. Can this be fixed? JopkeB (talk) 11:05, 16 February 2024 (UTC)Reply

I am not the only one having troubles, see Commons:Village pump#Cat-a-lot as well. JopkeB (talk) 13:27, 16 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
Same for me: moving categories does not work, moving files works. --Reinhard Müller (talk) 14:49, 16 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
I confirm that it is not working. Theklan (talk) 09:36, 24 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
I can also confirm that it's not working for categories, although it will sometimes say that the category was moved.Smasongarrison (talk) 00:28, 27 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
Note: If there is specific categories where problem can be replicated then please list them. (ie. fixing requires example cases) --Zache (talk) 15:58, 16 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
I would like to copy a lot of subcategories in Category:Energy by type of energy to Category:Energy by topic‎ (all except for the 'by' categories). JopkeB (talk) 16:20, 16 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
It was broken by a change to the HTML structure of the category pages, see phab:T355636#9553616. I hope it will be fixed by another change to the HTML structure, but if not, an interface admin should update the method getMarkedLabels() to account for the change. —Tacsipacsi (talk) 14:02, 18 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
Same problem for me. I have posted this on MediaWiki talk:Gadget-Cat-a-lot.js but the only replies are people saying "Same problem for me". So nobody is actually looking after this? Cnbrb (talk) 23:19, 27 February 2024 (UTC)Reply

For me moving categories was never possible with cat a lot. Always moved one by one.Paradise Chronicle (talk) 05:24, 14 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

Help:Gadget-Cat-a-lot#Preferences. RZuo (talk) 06:31, 14 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

  Question Is there any chance that we get an indication of:

  • What is the priority to solve this problem?
  • Whether someone is working on the solution of this problem?
  • How long it might take before it is solved?

--JopkeB (talk) 07:13, 5 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

the solution would be to revert phab:T355636. Can someone do that? Enhancing999 (talk) 15:25, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
No we can just apply this change to Cat-a-lot, as Tacsipacsi indicated above. Nardog (talk) 16:03, 23 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Can someone actually implement the fix? Smasongarrison (talk) 22:03, 23 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Only an interface admin can. Nardog (talk) 20:40, 24 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Nardog has asks on https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/MediaWiki_talk:Gadget-Cat-a-lot.js#Cat-a-lot_failing_202402 to solve this problem. Thanks! One big step forward. JopkeB (talk) 04:08, 25 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Images from Commons not being shown on Facebook edit

Hello. About two weeks ago Facebook seemed to stop showing images from links to Commons files. I do not know if that problem has been discussed here, but it still persists. For those of us who regularly post links in Facebook groups it is a great inconvenience, also given that all the existing links stopped showing images. Facebook obviously thinks that there is something wrong with the setup of Wikimedia Commons, but it is impossible for a common user as I to ask them what is wrong. Does anybody at Wikimedia Commons know what has changed? Cheers Rsteen (talk) 03:48, 16 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

This was phab:T359413 and has since been fixed. —TheDJ (talkcontribs) 21:57, 3 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for the info. I can see that the phab was assigned on March 6, so it would have been nice to get an answer at an earlier date from one of those involved with the phab. Cheers Rsteen (talk) 03:22, 12 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Interwikilinks to german wikipedia with no corresponding german article edit

I have found about 2000 pages here in commons with a interwikilink to german wikipedia, but the page does not exist. Examples:

Now the question is: What to do? Ignore? Fix?
I have a Bot in deWP and 7 years experience with this bot, but no idea with the bot policy here. --Wurgl (talk) 17:55, 24 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

Some of the pages have links added manually they could and should be cleaned up by a bot. But at Category:Adoxaceae in Naturschutzgebiet "St. Arnualer Wiesen" there seems to be a bug presumable in the infobox resulting in the incorrect link. GPSLeo (talk) 19:56, 24 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
@GPSLeo: Category:Adoxaceae in Naturschutzgebiet "St. Arnualer Wiesen" is getting its missing article link [[de:Adoxaceae in Naturschutzgebiet "St. Arnualer Wiesen"]] added by the [[de:{{PAGENAME}}]] code in {{Districts of Saarbrücken}} that is called by the {{Districts of Saarbrücken Navi}} template on the category page. Author appears to be AnRo0002. Maybe they can offer some insight. —RP88 (talk) 20:27, 24 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
As I said: About 2000 affected pages for deWP, these 5 are just random examples. (I did not check any other language) --Wurgl (talk) 21:00, 24 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
Right, but {{Districts of Saarbrücken Navi}} is used on 1586 categories and is the source for 2 of the 5 categories that you chose at random. It might be the cause of a big fraction of the 2000 affected pages that you identified. Commons bot policy is fairly permissive. You can read the policy at Commons:Bots and post at Commons:Bots/Requests if you want permission to run your bot on Commons. It might take a while to get approval, the Bot request board moves slowly. —RP88 (talk) 22:12, 24 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for pointing it out. If you are interested and patient enough to run your bot through this issue on commons, this would be great. Paradise Chronicle (talk) 18:36, 27 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
FYI: Diff from my bot: https://persondata.toolforge.org/data/common_diff.txt (if you know Unix/Linux "diff -c", it is similar, just very long lines are cut)
There are a 10 lines with "did not match" where that bad link is created magically by some template.
7 cases (use search pattern " ---") seem to by mistyped links to deWP, maybe these could be fixed manually, currently the bot transforms these links into plain text. --Wurgl (talk) 20:22, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for uploading a log of the results, although it is hard to validate the proposed edits since the bot did not log the names of the pages to which the proposed edits applied. From what I am able to ascertain the results are probably OK — it is nice to see that fixing {{Districts of Saarbrücken Navi}} cut the number of pages that needed a fix down to around 500. I would recommend that in the cases where the bot detects what are possibly mistyped links that it not transform them into plain text, it should instead leave them alone (although I certainly wouldn't object to you fixing them manually, should you choose to do so). The suggested edits might also be adding extraneous blank lines, but I couldn't verify that without knowing the pages to which the proposed edits applied. —RP88 (talk) 20:39, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Oops. Sorry. I run it again. For the mentioned possible typos, I have code (currently commented out) which changes [[de:article to [[:de:article --Wurgl (talk) 21:07, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I've taken a look at your new log. For an example of an edit where the bot should not convert an interwiki link to plain text, see the proposed edit to Category:Coordinates_templates. The bot is proposing to convert {{Category redirect|Commons geocoding}}[[de:Kategorie:Vorlage mit Koordinate]] to {{Category redirect|Commons geocoding}}Kategorie:Vorlage mit Koordinate. The ideal change would be to fix the interwiki to the correct interwiki of [[de:Kategorie:Vorlage:mit Koordinate]]. Since the bot isn't able to make that fix, it should leave the original incorrect interwiki alone, not convert it to plain text. For an example of an edit where the bot is inserting an extraneous blank line, see the proposed edit to Category:Alejandro_Barberón. The bot proposes to add a blank line in the middle of a list of interwiki links. —RP88 (talk) 21:25, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I really should not do such tasks in the late evening. I hope it is fixed now. Sorry. Those mentioned 7 cases need manual fixes, they are a little bit to different. --Wurgl (talk) 22:03, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Wurgl: Sorry, I had to step away for a couple of hours. I've looked at your latest log. I noticed the following issues, but I am not sure if they are problems:
  1. Something weird, maybe due to trailing spaces at the end of line, appears to be happening at Category:Riaboshenko,_Anatoli.
  2. It's probably unnecessary, and very nit-picky, but it would be nice that when there is a blank line before and after an interwiki link that ends up being removed, that the two blank lines that are now adjacent be converted into a single blank line. Examples are at Category:Verlegung_Stolperstein_Albert_Richter and gallery Buchholz-Orgel_Stralsund.
  3. There are some blocks of text in the middle of the log that seems to indicate a problem occurred, but not does not appear to be associated with the immediately preceding or following page in the log. Here are three samples, but there are many more:
    • File: Category:1878 in fil/m Pattern @(.\[\[ *)([dD]e *:+ *(Filmjahr[_ ]1878) *(#[^|\]]*)?(\|[^\]]*)?\]\])@s did not match
    • File: Category:Grave of Ludwig Zatzka Pattern @(.\[\[ *)([dD]e *:+ *(Gruppe[_ ]17[_ ]Nummer[_ ]30;[_ ]Mosaik[_ ]Leopold[_ ]Forstner) *(#[^|\]]*)?(\|[^\]]*)?\]\])@s did not match
    • File: Category:Photos by User:Johann56 Pattern @(.\[\[ *)([dD]e *:+ *(Photos[_ ]by[_ ]User\:Johann56) *(#[^|\]]*)?(\|[^\]]*)?\]\])@s did not match
RP88 (talk) 00:37, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I have rewritten parts of the code, should be better now.
There are a few of those links which I do not understand where they come from, however these links are in the database, see: quarry:query/81908 I tried a null-edit and a purge in Category:Dietersdorf_bei_Fürstenfeld but it did not help, in d:Q72607475 I do not see this magic "Wikipedia:WikiProjekt Österreich/HF/Dietersdorf" … no idea? --Wurgl (talk) 14:52, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Well, at Category:Dietersdorf_bei_Fürstenfeld where the interwiki points to de:Dietersdorf bei Fürstenfeld but Quarry says it points to de:Wikipedia:WikiProjekt_Österreich/HF/Dietersdorf_bei_Fürstenfeld is due to the move of that page earlier today, the corresponding edit to d:Q72607475, and the fact that your query at Quarry ran on a database (commons uses s4) with a replication lag that is currently 25 hours. I fixed 数字手势 earlier today, but the fix is still in the replication lag window. Hopefully both of these should be fixed in Quarry in several hours. The broken "Filmjahr <year>" interwiki links are coming from {{Filmcat}}. The broken "Road to Le Mans <year>" interwiki links are coming from {{RtLMyear}}. —RP88 (talk) 20:41, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Mobile versions of user talk pages are useless edit

Though I'm not active on Commons, I got bored and used my mobile device to look through some deletion requests, then at at a user's talk page. I knew that user had several deletion requests, but saw only one on their talk page. The talk page's history showed that old sections were archived, which was fine, but the page seemed to have no links to those archives.

I couldn't find the 'Read as wiki page' (or whatever it is) option, so out of desperation, I switched to the desktop version of the page. I was shocked at what I found there: not only the archive links, but also a notice that the user had been blocked indefinitely. (Before that, I hadn't seen any reference to a block.)

In summary, the mobile versions of user talk pages (and perhaps talk pages in general) are so crippled as to be useless. Brianjd (talk) 08:22, 4 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Yes, the mobile experience has always been really bad and as someone who basically exclusively edits with a mobile device it's not a fun experience. The worst part is that in most of the developing world the vast majority of people who surf the web do so using a mobile device. Not too long ago the experience of talk pages on mobile devices wasn't this bad, but they basically made it worse during an update a few months ago. After many, many years of neglecting the mobile experience I sincerely doubt that the developers are planning on fixing it anytime soon. --Donald Trung 『徵國單』 (No Fake News 💬) (WikiProject Numismatics 💴) (Articles 📚) 10:47, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
should mobile view on Commons be deactivated? Enhancing999 (talk) 15:18, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
That might go to far, to be honest, the best solution would be to make the mobile version identical to the desktop version but tailored for smaller screens, though the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) have confirmed multiple times that they will not do that. I have no idea why they insist on delivering an inferior and often infuriating experience to us mobile users, but there doesn't seem to be much we can do about it. De-activating it would break more than it would fix. --Donald Trung 『徵國單』 (No Fake News 💬) (WikiProject Numismatics 💴) (Articles 📚) 15:44, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I wonder what there is to break. Consider file description pages: mobile version lacks have of the content (categories).
I think the skin running on each WMF site is determined by the communities. Accordingly, e.g. dewiki doesn't use the same as enwiki, as they consider it not suitable. Enhancing999 (talk) 15:49, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Enhancing999 If you login in mobile view, select settings from top right menu and then toggle Advanced mode to be enabled then the categories are visible. --Zache (talk) 17:37, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I don't think it's available without login. We could keep the default mobile view from logged in users who require it (e.g. WMF staff for testing purposes). Enhancing999 (talk) 18:14, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Yes, this "solution" only works if you have a Wikimedia SUL account and happen to know where to find the button to enable it. Imagine you're a re-user looking for similar images (or other files) from a certain category and can't figure out how to do that. Most people surf the web on mobile devices these days, this is especially true for people from developing countries. When I was in the rural Philippines a few weeks ago I met several people who have never worked with or used a laptop or desktop computer in their lives but all use smartphones, even homeless people have smartphones, these are the most affordable internet-connected devices for most people in the world. Yet, for whatever reason "the mobile experience" of Wikimedia websites is beyond bad. If possible we should put it to a vote to show the MediaWiki developers that we don't want to suppress vital information for a major part of the audience. Files are for re-users and if they can't find the files then there's something seriously wrong with the system. --Donald Trung 『徵國單』 (No Fake News 💬) (WikiProject Numismatics 💴) (Articles 📚) 18:34, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I have been impression that "advanced mode" is for things in beta testing, not ready for primetime, for whatever reason. We could though ask what are plans to primetime it. --Zache (talk) 18:40, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
In mobile view parent categories aren't even visible. How useful can that be? Enhancing999 (talk) 19:34, 17 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Donald Trung, Please, provide the link here to any question "put to a vote." Thanks, -- Ooligan (talk) 17:49, 23 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Viewer to highlight topic on annotated files in category (sample: mountain panoramas) edit

Category:Plattenhörner (Vereina) has several photos with the two summits "Plattenhörner" annotated. I think it could be interesting to have a viewer that allows to view that annotated on all files at once, ideally with larger versions of the photos. @Kuhni74 fyi. Enhancing999 (talk) 09:15, 7 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Is there any way to get a list of users who uploaded images which appear in a Commons category? edit

Hi all

I'm working on some documentation around organising photography events and competitions and would really like to find a way to do this e.g I want to get a list of all the user names of uploaders for all the images in the category and all subcategories for Category:Potatoes. It would be a way to understand who is interested in the topic. I have a feeling this info might also be really useful for people who run the Wiki Loves photo competitions as well e.g 'this many people took part this year' although they may have other ways to do this.

Any suggestions would be really appreciated.

Thanks very much

John Cummings (talk) 09:16, 8 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

@John Cummings: It’s possible using the API: query+imageinfo can be used to get uploaders from a given category (but not subcategories), and query+categorymembers can be used to get the direct subcategories of a category. I don’t know about any ready-to-use user-friendly solutions. —Tacsipacsi (talk) 19:33, 14 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Tech News: 2024-15 edit

MediaWiki message delivery 23:34, 8 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

New tool for detecting logos edit

Hi all! As you already probably know, the Structured Content team is working this year on improving the current user experience with UploadWizard. We already have done some work on the “release rights” step, and we recently concluded a community discussion about the “describe” step. We are currently integrating the feedback received from you into our workflow.

Another thing we are working on is a potential improvement to automatically detect logos when uploaded on Commons through UploadWizard, in order to facilitate their evaluation by the community. A need for machine detection tools was raised in several discussions and user interviews we had in the past with the community, and logos are the second reason for media deletion after Freedom of Panorama, so we decided to work in that direction.

The tool we developed has shown promising results (accuracy is ~96%); in case you’re interested, you can see a brief summary of an evaluation of a sample batch of images. Our intention is for you to discuss and then, if consensus is reached, to integrate the tool in UploadWizard, in a way that would be beneficial for moderation workflow.

We would love to have your input. Do you think this tool could be useful? Do you think this tool could be integrated in UploadWizard, and then integrated in your moderation workflow? Sannita (WMF) (talk) 10:18, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Maybe you could run it through the "icons" category to test. Enhancing999 (talk) 10:53, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
If integrated into the MediaWiki Upload Wizard, how would it work? Would it prevent the uploading of a PD-textlogo or would it detect if an incompatible license or attribution is present? Or would it simply add them to a daily page for community evaluation, akin to "User:Minorax/PD textlogo/2020 June 6"? --Donald Trung 『徵國單』 (No Fake News 💬) (WikiProject Numismatics 💴) (Articles 📚) 11:03, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Donald Trung This is actually something that we wanted to discuss with the community. The tool, as of now, only recognises logos with a very high accuracy, but we want to ask the community what to do next. We are open to suggestions. Sannita (WMF) (talk) 11:17, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Sannita, I think that it might be wise to index all logos by date of upload on a single page and have the tool also detect the licenses, and then add these into sections like "Logos with Creative Commons licenses tagged as Own work", "Logos with public domain licenses", "Logos with Creative Commons licenses attributed to an external source". That way we can easily go through each type of upload, a lot of (new) users upload free logos as "Own work" with wrong licenses, these are the most problematic, but those uploaded with external links and / or specific licenses tend to be less problematic, so we would immediately know which areas to focus on, but still evaluate the other logos. For example, a very complex logo shouldn't be in "PD-textlogo" and can be deleted if not found to have a free license, which would also be easily detected using such a system. -- — Donald Trung 『徵國單』 (No Fake News 💬) (WikiProject Numismatics 💴) (Articles 📚) 11:26, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
For clarification "I think that it might be wise to index all logos by date of upload on a single page and have the tool also detect the licenses" would be a page like "Commons:Image detection/Logos/2024/November/12", I deliberately made logos as a sub-category of image detection because of the suggestions below by user "Adamant1" to also add this for postcards. I think that a tool like this could supersede the groups based on category done by the OgreBot today in the future. The page "Commons:Image detection" could be a central hub where reviewers (in the broadest sense) can use the AI-powered tool to find and detect logos. Heck, maybe in the distant future it can also detect images based on freedom of panorama (exterior images) and many other categories. Logos is a good start, though we should make sure that we don't discourage people from uploading, we should simply make it easier to detect possible copyright ©️ violations. We also used to have a page for uploads by new users, but I am not sure if we still have that (I think that I read somewhere that an update to the MediaWiki software made it difficult to maintain), perhaps the "Image detection" page can also have a sub-category for new users as well.
Heck, maybe we can even use this tool retroactively to group images together on a page like "Commons:Image detection/Logos/2012/December/8" and have like a button that trusted users can press to mark an image on that page as "patrolled" independent from the current solution we have. There are many ways that such a tool could be implemented, however, I sincerely hope that it won't be included before an image is published, as we could be missing out of valuable uploads because a new user (or a Wikipedian not familiar with this website) would be scared off by a warning message. -- — Donald Trung 『徵國單』 (No Fake News 💬) (WikiProject Numismatics 💴) (Articles 📚) 13:21, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
My own humble suggestion is to disable and dismantle this whole thing, and rather redirect WMF’s funding and priorities to actually useful things requested by the community — like, say, fixing the 10 year old bugs that still plague the unified login process.
I have nothing against some random AI outfit making use of Commons’s publicly available data to “train” their GIGO machines: Good luck with that. But WMF funding should not be used for this sort of useless, misleading, hyped-up nonsensical makework.
And I know that this suggestion will never be given any attention, but that’s how it goes. -- Tuválkin 01:14, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Tuvalkin, I'm not sure I'd have ranked it as the top priority (just since the old wizard wasn't especially bad), but I do think that improving the wizard is a reasonable place to focus. We're a media repository, which makes the process for uploading media a pretty essential function. We lose an untold number of contributions (Sannita, do you have any data?) from people who aren't able to go through it successfully, and it's the first line of defense to prevent/fix problematic contributions (which reduces moderation work later). Sdkbtalk 04:48, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Oh, I don’t think the upload wizzard should exist, at all. So there’s that. (Before you ask, I use Special:Upload or external tools, like Vicuña and Commonist.) I agree that uploading media a pretty essential function — therefore gamified uploads from clueless jokers should be discouraged. You however both bemoan those lost uploaders (can it be lost, that which never existed?…) and also call for a better ratmaze to make sure their “work” is not too deterimental to Commons, in terms of scope and copyright blunders.
At the same time many of the same people who cheer for this sort of continued addition of even more bells and whistles to the upload process, supposedly to avoid that loss of untold poor dears, are the same who constantly decry mass uploads, and who are happy to dance on the grave of the most prolific uploader (both quantity and quality) Commons ever had.
So, basicly not impressed. Wont help the Upload Wizzard this adding to the loop of an opaque step which likely takes pre-published media files away from WMF purview off to some blackbox; the environmental impact of the additional computing resources needed — that’s a cherry on top. (Remings me of: Hop on a jet plane to join all the WMF cronies for needless face-to-face meetings: The cafeteria is 100% vegan because environment, dontcha know?)
To clarify: In my opinion, one-off uploads, especially by editors creating articles in other projects, should be allowed into Commons via a pipeline that’s not the same of mass or “expert” uploading — I presume the Visual Editor has such a function (never used it — unsurprisingly, I think it’s also nonsense). However, it’s not helping this the training of an A.I. (and I’m all out of irony quote marks at this point) who will nag Clippy-style said unexperienced uploader, muddling the process even more. Especially since it will, most of the time, be confusing for logos all kinds of icons, diagrams, maps, flags, and traffic signs.
Was I the only one who shook their head and palmed their face at the apparent fact that the control group for this A.I. training was the contents of Category:Logos, with depth=0…? Yes, that one garbage-bag category where end up stuck all the poorly categorized logos, including, more than any deeper subcat, miscurated images which are anything but logos! Just wow — the more I think of this, the worse it looks like.
But you’re right that this sort of nonsense is (also) «requested by the community». Sad…!
-- Tuválkin 06:39, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Re training using a depth of 0, oof — Sannita, you all should rethink that.
Re your braoder point, you seem to be pursuing a world in which it's far harder for newcomers to contribute to Wikimedia. That's a world in which our projects have more systemic bias and less overall content, which is not what I'd want. Sdkbtalk 14:17, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Tuválkin: thanks for your comments. Logo samples in the evaluation dataset were collected via a PetScan query with a category depth > 0. I'm sorry I couldn't retrieve the exact depth from that query.
Cheers, MFossati (WMF) (talk) 16:55, 11 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
This looks like a super cool tool. I was just wishing there was something similar for detecting images of postcards. I have to agree with Donald Trung that it's probably better to use an indexer of exiting files instead of being directly integrated into UploadWizard. I imagine things like this are going to be the future of detecting and organizing specific types of images anyway and I doubt every use case going forward could be integrated into UploadWizard, but a hub for different types of detected images going forward would be great, starting out with logos and then integrating it with other types in the future. I don't think turning UploadWizard into a metaphorical Swiss Army knife of image detection at the point of upload would really be practical or useful though. From what I've seen most people are usually turned off by that sort of thing. Especially new users. UploadWizard is hard enough to understand and work with as it is already. --Adamant1 (talk) 12:57, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
This seems like a really useful tool! As far as integration into the Upload Wizard, we could use it to customize the user experience. For instance, there could be a dialogue "This looks like a logo. Is that correct? [Yes] [No]". [Yes] would autocategorize the image and lead to follow-up steps trying to confirm the copyright (e.g. directing them to COM:RELGEN if they claim it's their own work), and [No] would apply a hidden category or add it to a feed of reported false positives. Sdkbtalk 16:29, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Very nice! The model seems to detect reliable for graphics vs. random photos. Let me suggest some curveballs, from the type of images I often encounter: How does it perform when you include Flags and CoAs into the mixup? Uploads of those categories are also often deleted, but less often than logos. Another test could include Map details (i.e. cutouts) which are usually not deleted.
Also, what would this tool actually do after the detection? Bring the positives into a dedicated (hidden) category for users to evaluate? Yes, I could really see a use in that, for quicker processing of uncategorized uploads. --Enyavar (talk) 12:19, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Enyavar Thanks for your opinion. For now, we limited ourselves to logos because they were easier to detect, but if there is consensus for it, we can expand our work to other kinds of images.
About what the tool can actually do... that's the point of the discussion. We have suggestions to make, but we want to hear from you first, not to influence the discussion. The dedicated category/tag was actually one of the suggestions that we had, to be fair. But we'll take note of this suggestion, thanks! Sannita (WMF) (talk) 14:12, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Ah, sorry, I meant something else with my first comment: can the tool reliably detect logos in the presence of these other (similar looking) images? What are the percentages for examples A, B, C, D, E or possibly F, G, H? It won't be totally bad if these get detected as logos with a certainty of 90%+... I'm just curious whether or not files from these categories have a higher false positive rate for the current tool. --Enyavar (talk) 15:08, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Good idea, to test on coats of arms, flags and maps in addition to icons I mentioned above.
Wonder if the training set was useful: Commons mainly has simple logos for which it doesn't actually matter that they are also logos. Enhancing999 (talk) 20:04, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Hi @Enyavar and Enhancing999: {{u}} here, I'm the main technical point of contact behind this effort. Thanks for your feedback, very useful and appreciated! Here are the probability scores of the images you mentioned:
  • A = 77.82 %
  • B = 48.96 %
  • C = 88.9 %
  • D = 97.9 %
  • E = 99.87 %
  • F = 0.45 %
  • G = 0.36 %
  • H = 43.29 %
A few observations:
  • all scores but D and E seem low enough to be cut out;
  • as a human, I'd consider D and E as logos if I didn't know what coat of arms are. The model was indeed trained on logos and non-logos, so it hasn't got any notion of coat of arms;
  • probability threshold selection will be crucial to tune the amount of what we’d like to consider as true positives.
Anyway, I definitely think that your suggestions make a lot of sense: testing the robustness of the model against visually similar inputs is now in my to-do list.
Cheers, MFossati (WMF) (talk) 11:03, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
This doesn't seem un-useful, but I am a bit skeptical that it will move the needle much in terms of checking logos for copyvio/spam. There is already an overwhelming backlog of this stuff -- 118,798 files in Category:Unidentified logos alone. The most likely outcome is another backlog. Gnomingstuff (talk) 20:42, 9 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
What would probably make it a lot more useful is if it was used for flow control in the upload wizard. If an image is detected as a logo and the user confirms that it's a logo, that could eventually shunt the user into a workflow that asks them for logo-specific information, e.g. "what does this logo stand for", "where did you find this logo", etc. Omphalographer (talk) 18:57, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I can see both sides and arguments here. Tuvalkin is strictly against adding such "another whistle and bell" to the upload wizard (I find it tedious too, and I can understand how a Clippy-style intervention during the upload would frustrate the more experienced uploaders). On the other hand, this addition to the wizard could immensely enrich the descriptions of uploaded logos by one-time contributors (often by the companies/brands who hold copyright of the logo, i.e. these are officially sanctioned uploads that we'll be able to use) who we can never contact again even a week later for clarification on their uploads. --Enyavar (talk) 09:32, 11 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Thanks all for your interventions! We've already identified some good things we can work on, even though we would like the discussion to go on and let you continue have your say. We would like the discussion to go on some more days, to try to get some consensus going on. Sannita (WMF) (talk) 10:17, 15 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

How do I flag my bot’s edits as coming from a bot? edit

I'm the operator of the bot User:FlickypediaBackfillrBot. I've been through the bot approval process and it was approved by User:Krd in March. The user appears in the list of bots on Special:ListUsers.

I'm using the wbeditentity API and setting the bot=1 query parameter like it suggests, but the edits aren't being flagged as bot edits. This means that when I run the bot, the edits can overwhelm people’s watch lists (see feedback here: User talk:FlickypediaBackfillrBot#BOT flag).

I notice the wbeditentity API says This URL flag will only be respected if the user belongs to the group "Bots" – but this user is part of the "Bots" user group, isn't it?

I've extracted a minimal version of the code here, and you can see me setting the bot=1 parameter on L28: https://gist.github.com/alexwlchan/0acdb92d2e94a1c47d54fcef5b3e1fe9 I got this by looking at the equivalent code in mwclient.

Is this a bug in my code, or is there some other step in the bot approval procedure that I’ve missed? Alexwlchan (talk) 11:54, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

@Alexwlchan, i tried to replicate the problem and by using pywikibot your post parameters are looking good. Maybe one thing what you could try is to check if the bot flag is working when you are doing edits through pywikibot? (to see if there is some problem with the user rights. Though afaik bot flag should be working.)
My example code
Running the code‎
:python3 -m venv ./venv
:source venv/bin/activate
:pip install pywikibot
:echo "usernames['commons']['commons'] = 'YourBotUserName'" > user-config.py
:python editcaption.py
:‎
-- Zache (talk) 12:48, 11 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Also, you can use Quarry to check if the edits are bot flagged (example: https://quarry.wmcloud.org/query/81935 ) -- Zache (talk) 12:49, 11 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thanks User:Zache!
If I run your code, I do see my edits showing up with the bot flag, so it must be a bug on my side. I'll have a look through the pywikibot code to understand what I’m doing differently and find my mistake. Alexwlchan (talk) 13:30, 11 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Right, the issue seems to be how I'm authenticating – I'm using a Personal API token whereas the Pywikibot code is using some login cookies to make its request. I think I need to take a closer look at my auth code. :) Alexwlchan (talk) 15:20, 11 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
For the sake of future readers: one of the key steps in debugging was observing the HTTP requests made by pywikibot. I've written about how I did that here: https://alexwlchan.net/til/2024/how-to-see-pywikibot-http-requests/ Alexwlchan (talk) 15:34, 12 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for the debugging example! --Zache (talk) 17:40, 12 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

New tool for cropping and rotating images (proposal) edit

MediaWiki or at least Commons should have a function that allows to crop images and save them as separate ones directly, including the original description.

Why would we need it when most phones can crop or even rotate images?

  • preserve image resolution
  • preserve metadata
  • ensure derivation is annotated on original file

We currently have a bot and a user tool that have some of the functionality, but this lags behind a reasonable functionality. Maybe WMF development can be facilitated by adopting some of their code. Enhancing999 (talk) 08:13, 12 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Enhancing999, CropTool has no lag for me. You ask to crop an image, you crop it and it is immediately uploaded. I use it regularly and I do not have any complains about it. Rotatebot also seems to work fine. You tag a file for rotating and within 24 hours it is rotated. I guess we could have a tool to rotate immediately, but the current approach is not bad. --Jarekt (talk) 00:42, 18 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
There are two years of open bug reports and feature requests on the tools talk page.
I agree it works on files of 500 KB, but larger ones fail now, especially when attempt to fix rotation by a few degrees. Rotatebot can't handle that. Also the automated border detection fails. Enhancing999 (talk) 08:15, 18 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Lots of miscellaneous failures over the last few years, and no one committed to maintaining it.
I'd be glad to see a group of three or more volunteers take it on, or WMF, but finding one more individual to do it just postpones collapse, because the environment keeps changing. - Jmabel ! talk 12:46, 18 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Isn't development of key features meant to be done by paid WMF staff? It's not a content/editorial issue. Enhancing999 (talk) 07:41, 20 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Enhancing999:
Why would we need it when most phones can crop or even rotate images?
That assumes that users use phones. The section ‘Mobile versions of user talk pages are useless’ did point out that some users exclusively use phones, shunning other devices such as laptops and desktop computers.
But not all users are like that. There are good reasons for using other devices, including (but not limited to) the criticisms of Wikimedia's mobile versions given in that same section. Brianjd (talk) 08:30, 23 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
This section is actually about two distinct actions:
  1. Edit an image (by cropping or rotating), while otherwise preserving image quality and metadata.
  2. Upload the edited image with an appropriate filename and description and ensure that the original image’s description is updated accordingly.
But this section proposes to bundle these actions into one tool.
The problem is that there are other important types of edits besides crops and rotations. Even if Commons can’t help with the edits themselves, it should still help with filenames and descriptions, the same way as it does for crops and rotations. Brianjd (talk) 08:46, 23 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Well, in the past, bundling these actions have been proven fairly helpful. If you think other tools are needed at Commons, please discuss this elsewhere. Enhancing999 (talk) 14:35, 23 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Enhancing999: I agree that bundling these actions into one tool is helpful. But that one tool should be implemented as a wrapper around more specific tools (one for cropping and one for handling filenames and descriptions), which should also be accessible separately. Brianjd (talk) 08:21, 24 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
As user, I'm mainly interested in a stable, working tool. For the rest, WMF pays IT staff. Enhancing999 (talk) 08:40, 24 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Tech News: 2024-16 edit

MediaWiki message delivery 23:26, 15 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

changes to Module:Autotranslate edit

Module:Autotranslate was altered today to use more efficient test for presence of a language subtemplate. The new version was tested extensively, but please be on a lookout for any issues with templates using it. Please ping me if any issues are found or suspected. Jarekt (talk) 13:34, 18 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Deletions on "structured tab" edit

Anybody know if the feature is still being maintained? I reported a problem a while back about the impossibly to remove wrong statements, but it's still broken. Enhancing999 (talk) 07:44, 20 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Just to confirming. Your are referring to the coordinate deletion problem described in phab:T313638 or is there some other bug? -- Zache (talk) 16:08, 20 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
It's the problem noted here in January 2023 (more than a year ago): Commons:Village_pump/Technical/Archive/2023/01#Delete_wrong_coordinates_not_working. Any idea why nothing happened? Enhancing999 (talk) 14:40, 23 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Tech News: 2024-17 edit

MediaWiki message delivery 20:25, 22 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

How to search under 6807 photos edit

I usually edit issues related to rivers of Chile and there is a lack of images directly showing that themes. Some time ago I asked here how to search for a foto of an object located between coordinates (lat1, lon1) and (lat2,lon2) under the 6807 fotos of the Category:Satellite pictures of Chile . @HyperGaruda: kindly answered here with a reference to use "Template:Object location". I tried it and became a new window on the directory page but nothing more. Can anyone give a more explizit indication?. Thanks in advance, Juan Villalobos (talk) 13:53, 28 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

what or how exactly do you want to find?
try using "Map of all coordinates on OSM" i just added. RZuo (talk) 14:29, 28 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
structured data might allow you to search with a bounding box. Enhancing999 (talk) 14:38, 28 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
RZuo, the "Map of all coordinates on OSM" do it very well. I had thought in a excel file with filename;lat;lon;description. But the map is as least so good.
Enhancing999, what is "structured data" in this case and how can I use it?
My problem is that many regions of Chile have been never visited by anyone, not to say photografied. The last option is to show a satellite photo.
Thank you. --Juan Villalobos (talk) 12:58, 29 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
if you want to search about a specific coord, here's a way to search within r km from (x,y): mw:Help:CirrusSearch#Geo_Search.
take a look at other sections of the page for more creative ways to restrict search results.
i dont know how to search within a box bounded by two pairs of coords though.
Commons:Structured data. RZuo (talk) 15:02, 29 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?search=nearcoord:99km,-38.73,-72.66 for temuco.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?search=nearcoord:99km,-38.73,-72.66+deepcategory:"Satellite+pictures+of+Chile" :) --RZuo (talk) 15:18, 29 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

For your question, the following may do:

#defaultView:Map
SELECT ?file ?image ?location ?filename WHERE 
{
  SERVICE wikibase:box 
  {
    ?file wdt:P1259 ?location.
    bd:serviceParam wikibase:cornerWest "Point(-121.872777777 36.304166666)"^^geo:wktLiteral .
    bd:serviceParam wikibase:cornerEast "Point(-121.486111111 38.575277777)"^^geo:wktLiteral .
  }
  ?file schema:url ?image; 
  schema:contentUrl ?url.
  BIND(wikibase:decodeUri(CONCAT("File:", SUBSTR(STR(?url), 53 ))) AS ?filename)
}
LIMIT 10000

Try it!

You need to pick eastmost and westmost points. Enhancing999 (talk) 23:38, 29 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Tech News: 2024-18 edit

MediaWiki message delivery 03:30, 30 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

"Caught exception of type JobQueueError" edit

I'm trying to upload a file (DjVu, if it matters) with UploadWizard and I get an error: "Caught exception of type JobQueueError".

There's also something like [d699cdd6-f1f2-4319-a840-d9e6048a1c70], that varies.

Same with the old upload form.

Could someone explain how to fix it? Thanks, Alien333 (talk) 13:31, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply

Same here for JPG files. Here's a screenshot. Happened across different files. Re-uploaded, re-downloaded, changed a browser, and still doesn't upload. S5A-0043Talk 13:39, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
For how long has it been doing it? Alien333 (talk) 13:41, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Since around half an hour ago? Can't remember exactly but I uploaded around 7-8 files including File:(SGP-Singapore) SBS Transit SBS6870S 27 2024-05-04.jpg in one go. The file I linked was the only one that passed. It wouldn't work when I tried reuploading the rest and hasn't worked since. S5A-0043Talk 13:44, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
@S5A-0043 Now it works (at least for me). — Alien333 (what I did & why I did it wrong) 14:22, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Same for me here. Seems like problem solved. Also your signature made me click to see "what I did and why I did it wrong" in this scenario, lol. S5A-0043Talk 14:26, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
It's just my usual signature, but I didn't have it here yet because I'm mostly a Wikisourcerer, and it's only upon talking here that I realised I had not set it hereAlien333 (what I did & why I did it wrong) 14:31, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply

Error "To avoid creating high replication lag, this transaction was aborted because the write duration (..) exceeded the 3 second limit." edit

I keep getting that. Enhancing999 (talk) 17:12, 5 May 2024 (UTC)Reply

Yes, I got that too. I believe it was a temporary glitch. Yann (talk) 17:14, 5 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
I've been getting the error for a while now and it seems to still be going on. --Adamant1 (talk) 17:49, 5 May 2024 (UTC)Reply

New tool for importing SteamGridDB images edit

Hi, just wanted to share a new tool I've made: sgdb2commons. It's a browser script that makes it easy to quickly import images from steamgriddb.com. The website is a pretty good source for high-quality video game logos, and many of those logos are too simple to be copyrighted, so this tool lets you pick images to copy to Commons. Installation and usage info can be found at User:IagoQnsi/sgdb2commons. This is a very simple first version of the script, so please let me know if you encounter any issues or have any suggestions! Best, IagoQnsi (talk) 02:31, 6 May 2024 (UTC)Reply