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Wikia turns a profit, thanks in part to WoWWiki

by Alex Ziebart on Sep.11, 2009, under 70000, cooking-wiki, making-money, money, pages, profit, reports, twilight, user-generated-content, wall-street-journal, wiki, wikia, world-of-warcraft, wowwiki

Wikia has been doing a little bit of press lately — they’re the for-profit company that has spun off of the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation that runs the huge Wikipedia website. Wikia has announced, as reported in the Wall Street Journal and elsewhere, that they’ve hit profit early. While they didn’t expect to actually make any money running ads next to user-generated content until next year, they’ve actually made some money this year already. They credit the growth of all of their miniwiki sites, which has expanded greatly over the last year.

So why are we reporting all of this here? You may have already guessed: one of their largest sites, if not the largest, is the World of Warcraft-related wiki, WoWWiki (which we definitely read and use here at WoW.com all the time). WoWWiki is mentioned in a few reports as having 70,000 pages (almost 1/3 more than the next-biggest site in the network, a cooking wiki). In fact, at least one reports credits WoWWiki, along with the Twilight-related wiki, for the growth entirely. We’re not sure how much of a part they actually played in the new reported profits, but they are definitely growing, and are a terrific resource for those of us in the WoW community.

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Wikia turns a profit, thanks in part to WoWWiki originally appeared on WoW.com on Fri, 11 Sep 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WoW as a channel for news from Iran?

by Alex Ziebart on Jun.21, 2009, under chatting, craig-labovitz, current-events, global, internet, iran, iran-election, manipulation, media, news, politics, speculation, twitter, video-games, violence, wall-street-journal, world-events, world-of-warcraft, worldwide

Normally, this wouldn’t rate too high for us — lots of people have ideas about how to use World of Warcraft, and many of them never actually come about. But then again, this is in the Wall Street Journal of all places, so we’ll give it a look. If you’re on Twitter, you’ve probably heard about what’s going on in Iran right now — there was an election, the “official” results given were judged as rigged by many involved, and the government seems to be cracking down on both news media and citizen journalism, as well as protesting citizens, to very sad results. How does World of Warcraft fit in to all of this? Andrew Lavallee of the WSJ’s Digits blog points to this report by Craig Labovitz, which talks about how Internet traffic has been filtered out of the country around the election. At the very end of his analysis, Labovitz points out that channels for videogames, including both Xbox Live and World of Warcraft, have shown very little government manipulation. That suggests that if the government in Iran does continue to shut down certain channels, citizens there might be forced to spread the news through any virtual route they can, including possibly Azeroth.

This is obviously all just analysis and speculation so far — while there clearly (from those charts) has been interference in the media, no one (as far as we know) has yet had to resort to chatting in World of Warcraft to get their message out, and though what’s happening in Iran is made up of some very serious (and seriously unfortunate) situations, the fervor online about using brand new channels like Twitter to share real-time news is often overstated. Personally, I believe that even if Twitter didn’t exist, this information would find another way to get out. Still, the interesting thing to take away here is that even our “silly” video games today are actually media on a global level.

Thanks, Cedars!

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WoW as a channel for news from Iran? originally appeared on WoW.com on Sun, 21 Jun 2009 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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