Tol creates new IPCC wiki – anyone can take part

Dr. Richard Tol writes:

One of the ideas that came out of the AR4 debacle was to create an IPCC wiki: Put the entire report online for people to comment and amend as needed. Wikis have two advantages:

  1. Anyone can take part
  2. Updates can be as frequent as required

Of course, the IPCC did not follow this suggestion. So I made a start.

I would proceed as follows:

  1. Upload the Fifth Assessment Report, one section per page
  2. Create links within the report
  3. Create links to the underlying literature
  4. Audit the agreement between IPCC report and literature
  5. Audit the quality and representativeness of the authors
  6. Amend the report with new findings

However, this is a wiki. If you want to use it to audit the responses to the review comments, contrast IPCC to NIPCC, or do whatever, that is perfectly fine. The second contributor, Donna Laframboise, started by adding links between IPCC authors and environmental organizations. I had not thought of that, but it is very relevant of course.

Wikis operate on the basis of a simple principle: If you want something done, do it.

The Fifth Assessment Report is long and complicated. Uploading it all will take many hours — and a correspondingly greater effort would be required if drafts and previous reports are added too.

It is probably worth it, though, if you focus on your pet peeve.

I picked Wikia. It is a user-friendly environment. Anyone can sign up, anonymously if they so want. Wikia uses the same syntax as Wikipedia. There are additional software bits that can be added if this takes off. Maps is one example. Semantics is another, which would automate diagnostic tests and uncover hidden links.

Let’s see where this ends.

See it here: http://ipcc.wikia.com/wiki/IPCC_Wiki

Donna Laframboise also has some words on this http://nofrakkingconsensus.com/2014/05/11/ipcc-wiki-launched-volunteers-needed/

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jimmi_the_dalek
May 11, 2014 3:21 pm

Isn’t this just going to end up with the sort of shambles that Wikipedia’s climate pages display with edits and counter-edits, and not just from the AGW side – what are you going to do if the “slayers” and “cyclomaniacs” start loading their nonsense in?

Daniel G.
May 11, 2014 3:38 pm

Scottish Sceptic writes:

I’ve just been onto the wiki. It took me ages to work out how I “sign up” to this wiki, by which time the adverts had so got on my nerves (as they hide the content without being able to be shut down), that I’ve decided I will probably not be contributing.
I will instead suggest an advert free version using mediawiki.

Weird… I registered in less than 2 minutes by clicking the sign-up button.
You should start using an ad-blocker.

Scottish Sceptic
May 11, 2014 3:41 pm

Gregory says: “Wiki always ends up in controlling the narrative. It becomes the iron will of whomever controls the page, and a poo-slinging affair.
As I found out at Wikipedia, they called it a “science” article – but it was called “science” but only in the sense that that small group of academics referred to as “scientists” could ever have their views quoted.
So, e.g. when I tried to start a new section some time around 2007 on “the pause”, whilst I could prove that the climate had paused, and I could show that this was being actively discussed in the media by reliable sources (for the rest of wikipedia) because the [academic?] editors who edited wikipedia said that only scientists [i.e. those editors] could be quoted – despite the overwhelming scientific evidence – it was not deemed “science”.
So, if there is one thing I would change it is this: that assertions have to be supported by facts, and irrespective of the number who disagree, if one should have the facts to support their edits, then their edits should be included no matter howmany have opinions to the contrary.
In other words facts trump opinion and “poo-slinging”.

Jimbo
May 11, 2014 3:42 pm

Donna owns the IPCC. She has been documenting the extensive links between advocates and scientists with advocacy group connections INSIDE the IPCC. It’s quite shocking as to the scale. I do believe it’s one of the reasons for the Himalayan 2035 meltdown debacle. There is also Greenpeace and a host of other infiltrators.
Nofrakkingconsensus
How the WWF Infiltrated the IPCC – Part 1
http://nofrakkingconsensus.com/2011/09/23/how-the-wwf-infiltrated-the-ipcc-%E2%80%93-part-1/
How the WWF Infiltrated the IPCC – Part 2
http://nofrakkingconsensus.com/2011/09/26/how-the-wwf-infiltrated-the-ipcc-part-2/

Scottish Sceptic
May 11, 2014 3:58 pm

Daniel G. says:
Weird… I registered in less than 2 minutes by clicking the sign-up button.
You should start using an ad-blocker.

As I have my own advertising sites I know that adverts are an important source of income for many sites including this one and by blocking them you are getting content for free which someone like Anthony works damned hard to produce.
Producing good websites costs money – and someone has to pay for it and if the only websites you want to see are those paid for by all those rich green government-funded capitalists shoving their green nonsense down our throats – then fine – get an ad blocker,
However, then you get idiotic sites like this wiki which go way way over the top and even I am forced to agree that I cannot possibly use their site with their level of adverts. So it is a stark choice between getting an ad-blocker or not using the site.
So, let’s examine those two:
1. Getting an ad blocker – you then stop every site including mine and Anthony’s getting revenue. The result is that websites have to get more revenue from less users which means even more intrusive ads – meaning even more get ad blockers, meaning sites like Anthony might have a massive hit count, but almost no money to show – so eventually what choice do they have but to give up.
2. You stop using that particular site – they loose revenue, they go out of business and a better behaved and less greedy site steps in to fill the gap.
Which do you prefer?

Daniel G.
May 11, 2014 5:07 pm

Scottish Sceptic writes:

As I have my own advertising sites I know that adverts are an important source of income for many sites including this one and by blocking them you are getting content for free which someone like Anthony works damned hard to produce.
Producing good websites costs money – and someone has to pay for it and if the only websites you want to see are those paid for by all those rich green government-funded capitalists shoving their green nonsense down our throats – then fine – get an ad blocker,
However, then you get idiotic sites like this wiki which go way way over the top and even I am forced to agree that I cannot possibly use their site with their level of adverts. So it is a stark choice between getting an ad-blocker or not using the site.
So, let’s examine those two:
1. Getting an ad blocker – you then stop every site including mine and Anthony’s getting revenue. The result is that websites have to get more revenue from less users which means even more intrusive ads – meaning even more get ad blockers, meaning sites like Anthony might have a massive hit count, but almost no money to show – so eventually what choice do they have but to give up.
2. You stop using that particular site – they loose revenue, they go out of business and a better behaved and less greedy site steps in to fill the gap.
Which do you prefer?

Ad-blockers are configurable. You can create create rules to specifically target some sources, and create exceptions.
By the way, the marginal effect of adblocking (even if I weren’t adjusting my configurations, because I am) is close to zero. You are exaggerating.

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
May 11, 2014 7:24 pm

rgbatduke says:
>>Upload the Fifth Assessment report? All 9000 pages of it?
>I have to second this. I have (for example) Chapter 9 close at hand, and would cheerfully upload it ALL AT ONCE for reference and comment on it in extreme detail, but surely chapter granularity is adequate.
Seconded and thanks to the organisers if this important approach to getting a substantive review. Policy should be informed by the facts, not a pre-cooked agenda.
Don’t worry about the ‘Connollys’. This is not about personalities, it is about science. It is reasonable to block disruptors. For that reason I doubt the ‘anonymous’ edits rule will last because of the….you know what I mean.

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
May 11, 2014 7:35 pm

Went there, saw that.
First question arising:
Does the albedo of plant leaves change with temperature? There is no mechanism shown in the usual ‘GHG effect’ chart http://ipcc.wikia.com/wiki/Special:NewFiles?file=WGI_AR5_Fig1-1.jpg turning temperature or LWR into a change in SWR at the top. One way this might be happening is if there is a change in albedo (lightening in colour) as plant leaves get hotter in the sun during the day.
Forests are very large. If there is a 2 W/m^2 change in albedo with temperature, for example, then there is a variable that affects what is shown only as “LWR emitted from surface” over the cartoon forest, Suppose the difference was 20 Watts. A dark green leaf changing to a paler shade has a very different absorption coefficient, the balance being rejected as SWR.
Combined with the cloud and thunderstorm thermostat we find a powerful self-regulating mechanism.

Editor
May 11, 2014 7:37 pm

Hans Erren says:
May 11, 2014 at 3:00 pm
> why don’t you have an edit button
WUWT uses a free service of WordPress. He could have edit features if he ran a WordPress service on systems he controls, but there are very good reasons not to do that.
The free service doesn’t provide one.
I use “It’s All Text” for big comments, I think I have a link to that at my Guide to WUWT on the right side nav bar.

Editor
May 11, 2014 7:45 pm

Scottish Sceptic says:
May 11, 2014 at 3:58 pm

So, let’s examine those two:
1. Getting an ad blocker – ….
2. You stop using that particular site – they loose revenue, they go out of business and a better behaved and less greedy site steps in to fill the gap….
Which do you prefer?

I have a compromise – I use Flashblock (I despise dynamic ad images and wouldn’t buy from them anyway). I configure Firefox to display dynamics once. That’s a big hassle for blink images and other dynamic GIFs in WUWT posts, but it’s a big help in taming the ads.

John Andrews
May 11, 2014 9:14 pm

Good idea. Bad wiki! It is white on gray. I give up already. I cannot read this stuff without eyestrain. I can and should participate. I refuse to do so if not black on white. Sorry.

May 11, 2014 10:23 pm

Intrusive ads will disappear when you register. Registration will also hide your IP address.

May 11, 2014 10:30 pm

A
Colors changed.

thegriss
May 12, 2014 12:32 am

To Paul Homewood, A link you might also like.
http://home.iprimus.com.au/foo7/droughthistory.html

MikeUK
May 12, 2014 12:49 am

Excellent idea for the state-of-the-science to be developed and updated continuously, not in silly set-piece battles a few months before arbitrary (and no doubt politically influenced) deadlines.
Kick politicians and political agendas out of science.

May 12, 2014 4:40 am

It should be an excellent source of information for those who want to know more. Great idea!

May 12, 2014 5:08 am

When this view, I have to give a general assessment that characterizes such comprehensiveness related to the study of climate change and weather conditions. We have a one proverb that says, “where many grandmothers, children have a hernia.” So here there are too many “grandmother”.
Science, like most individuals, serving all means, even illogical, to prove something to the benefit of their policies and not for the benefit of science and mankind .. This effort to address the millennium puzzle about the true causes of climate change on our planet, will never lead to a real solution. The causes of climate change, by all logic, can not be effect ofhuman activity. For this there is a lot of evidence, other than political.
I saw the budgets for these studies in 2011, 2012, 2013 i2014 year, and it is a miracle that no one was in so much money found real evidence.
I offer forums such as: USGCRP and NSF, I’ll give you an idea and true causes of climate change for all time, for a lot less money than they spend with no real results. Make a deal and everything will be fine. Will not be known for several months. This is not to irritate anyone, because it is really illogical to so many people and organizations are looking for solutions and so spend money without a solution.
Now a serious question: How would America be willing to pay for a solution to this problem.
Where should I contact to arrange for the solution of the true causes of climate change on all the planets, not only in our. With what I have, can be explained almost all phenomena in the sun. These phenomena are only indicators of climate change, reconnection of magnetic poles of the sun, maybe an earthquake (to be checked).
Waiting for a call to solve this so far the most important issue humanity.

John McClure
May 12, 2014 6:45 am

What a great idea!

Orson
May 12, 2014 6:51 am

While this has useful and appealing potential, Wikipedia is well – but not widely – known to be a place where controllers and editors and other gatekeepers destroy its crowdsourced balance. Then it becomes a propaganda tool. And it happens to controversial topics whenever people with too much times hold agendas supporting vested interests.
“Noble Cause” corruption at its finest!
Lacking adequate controls, I vote with Scotish Skeptic – “I’ve decided I will probably not be contributing.” There are better things to do – for instance, to crowdsource the filling out of the Wiki pages of climate-related CAGW-skeptical scientists who have not yet been smeared into Martian-believing nut jobs, like Fred Singer has been.

John McClure
May 12, 2014 6:52 am

IPCC Wiki
s/b
IPCC AR5 Wiki Project
IMO, IPCC Wiki misrepresents the project as it implies the wiki is endorsed by the IPCC.
Why not simply match the look of Wikipedia which is very readable. I’d be happy to help in this regard if you need it.

catweazle666
May 12, 2014 7:04 am

Just so long as William Connolly is kept as far away from it as possible.

John McClure
May 12, 2014 7:06 am

Spoke to soon, the landing page changed from a dark background to a more readable format when I joined the wiki.

John McClure
May 12, 2014 7:28 am

“Let’s see where this ends.”
LOL, where to begin?
Questions:
– do you want an OCR of the pdf chapters so text can be edited on the wiki or pdfs so the pages can’t be edited without replacing the chapter or page pdf?
– is the IPCC willing to give us the text version of the assessment reports?
– if yes to OCR, do you want the content to be structured using xml to make a TOC, searches, etc. easier?
– if yes to xml, which DTD would you prefer?
– obvious question, is the AR5 report copyrighted material and or do we have permission to post it?
– does any of the AR5 artwork require rights permission from the authors?
– If post pdfs so the content can’t be edited online, would you like single page pdfs posted by chapter?

John McClure
May 12, 2014 7:43 am

Dr. Tol,
IMO, the biggest question relates to standards and practices.
how to ensure assessment authors are treated with proper respect and to ensure the project doesn’t spin into failure before it gets off the ground.
Any suggestions?

John McClure
May 12, 2014 7:57 am

WOW, that was fast — chapters 1 and 2 were just posted.