WEBVTT 00:00:06.290 --> 00:00:09.505 (Susanna) ...Wikimedia Finland, and we have during this year 00:00:09.505 --> 00:00:12.058 started working with the Saami communities, 00:00:12.058 --> 00:00:16.031 the culture and language, starting experimenting 00:00:16.031 --> 00:00:19.467 doing the groundwork for future projects. 00:00:19.467 --> 00:00:21.775 (Kimberli) Well, actually she started working this year. 00:00:21.775 --> 00:00:24.909 I've been working since 2006 so... (laughter) 00:00:25.536 --> 00:00:27.785 (Susanna) Well, it's at the end of chapter... 00:00:31.539 --> 00:00:35.162 Yep here we go. Let's see what we have. 00:00:37.715 --> 00:00:39.283 I don't know which one it is. 00:00:42.656 --> 00:00:44.630 [inaudible] 00:00:48.670 --> 00:00:51.936 So usually when we give presentations, we realize nobody knows 00:00:51.936 --> 00:00:54.277 what we're talking about, the Saami languages. 00:00:54.287 --> 00:00:57.760 So this is Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia. 00:00:58.329 --> 00:01:01.795 And the yellow part-- and it starts quite far down here-- 00:01:01.795 --> 00:01:05.212 is the Saami dialect continuum or language continuum. 00:01:05.340 --> 00:01:08.360 And the languages that have Wikipedias are five-- 00:01:08.360 --> 00:01:11.169 or there's actually only one, Northern Saami Wikipedia. 00:01:11.640 --> 00:01:15.605 And then the other languages that we work with are six and seven, 00:01:15.605 --> 00:01:18.222 and Jon Harald is from Wikipedia Norway, 00:01:18.222 --> 00:01:20.588 and they work with the other ones in Norway and Sweden 00:01:21.167 --> 00:01:23.165 and the Northern Saami one. 00:01:24.806 --> 00:01:28.283 Sää'mjânnam is the name for this area in Skolt Saami. 00:01:30.133 --> 00:01:31.553 This is somehow... 00:01:39.102 --> 00:01:40.639 Yeah, so. 00:01:41.247 --> 00:01:46.247 (Susanna) Oh yes, while thinking 00:01:46.247 --> 00:01:49.217 about how to serve these language communities, 00:01:49.233 --> 00:01:55.560 as Kimberli was showing there-- maybe we'll go back to the map, 00:01:55.679 --> 00:02:01.831 the biggest language community in Saami area is the Northern Saami. 00:02:01.831 --> 00:02:05.898 And when we think of Saami, we think of Northern Saami, 00:02:05.898 --> 00:02:09.898 but there are at least eight other Saami communities 00:02:09.902 --> 00:02:10.998 and language groups. 00:02:10.998 --> 00:02:13.083 So we are working with two, 00:02:13.083 --> 00:02:18.655 which is here--it's Inari Saami 00:02:18.703 --> 00:02:23.102 as well Skolt Saami, they both have around 300 speakers. 00:02:23.297 --> 00:02:25.335 So we cannot expect-- 00:02:25.447 --> 00:02:27.791 now going to the next slide-- 00:02:27.791 --> 00:02:32.074 there are two different types of language communities, 00:02:32.088 --> 00:02:34.901 those that have Wikipedias and therefore are served 00:02:34.901 --> 00:02:38.388 within the Wikimedia ecosystem 00:02:38.390 --> 00:02:40.915 and those that don't have a Wikipedia, 00:02:40.915 --> 00:02:43.249 and therefore it's much more difficult for them. 00:02:43.282 --> 00:02:46.949 And we find that working with structured data, 00:02:46.949 --> 00:02:49.994 we can serve these language communities as well. 00:02:50.409 --> 00:02:57.150 So Kimberli may tell you about this sticker that you have got. 00:02:57.565 --> 00:02:58.631 So the sticker says-- 00:02:58.631 --> 00:03:00.998 in Skolt Saami which is spoken by about 300 people-- 00:03:00.998 --> 00:03:05.682 it says Wikimedia Finland wishes everyone a happy United Nations 00:03:05.682 --> 00:03:09.592 International Year of Indigenous Languages 2019. 00:03:09.930 --> 00:03:12.415 And the sticker was created for an event that we went to 00:03:12.415 --> 00:03:15.462 at the end of August in Northern Finland. 00:03:18.367 --> 00:03:22.137 (Susanna) So, it wasn't that easy. 00:03:22.137 --> 00:03:26.682 So we started setting up language code 00:03:26.682 --> 00:03:30.948 for Skolt Saami and Inari Saami and found out that it's not 00:03:30.948 --> 00:03:32.300 a straightforward process. 00:03:32.300 --> 00:03:33.427 It's not really documented. 00:03:33.427 --> 00:03:35.882 It was really, really hard to find out how to do it. 00:03:35.882 --> 00:03:43.795 So we made this elephant metaphor here as a reindeer. 00:03:43.809 --> 00:03:47.849 So there are different parts of this Wikimedia environment 00:03:47.849 --> 00:03:52.471 that look at some specific area of this language, 00:03:53.851 --> 00:03:58.977 definitions and there doesn't seem to be an overall way 00:03:58.977 --> 00:04:02.163 and process of how to deal with adding your languages. 00:04:02.489 --> 00:04:07.041 So what we did was we made a lot of noise 00:04:07.041 --> 00:04:12.041 and tried to ask everyone to help us, and in the end, 00:04:12.057 --> 00:04:16.553 we managed to first have Skolt Saami and Inari Saami 00:04:16.553 --> 00:04:19.851 for monolingual properties; 00:04:19.851 --> 00:04:22.690 then to labels in Wikidata; 00:04:22.690 --> 00:04:25.571 and then only to find out that they wouldn't work 00:04:25.571 --> 00:04:27.540 in structured data on Commons. 00:04:27.790 --> 00:04:34.310 Then again after another process for that, maybe six months after, 00:04:34.310 --> 00:04:37.553 we find out that they wouldn't work in Wikipedias 00:04:37.553 --> 00:04:40.709 so I think that's still unsolved. 00:04:40.709 --> 00:04:43.366 (Kimberli) When we first started, you could only use Northern Saami 00:04:43.366 --> 00:04:45.707 and Southern Saami in Wikimedia projects. 00:04:45.707 --> 00:04:51.244 And as a bonus part of this, we have now the ability to use 00:04:51.616 --> 00:04:53.725 the Finnish Romani language also 00:04:53.725 --> 00:04:56.021 within the Wikimedia projects. 00:04:59.320 --> 00:05:05.881 This trying to get your language-- the ability to be able to use 00:05:05.906 --> 00:05:08.715 your language in a Wikimedia project is not straightforward. 00:05:08.715 --> 00:05:11.497 It's really difficult, and when you talk to people, 00:05:11.497 --> 00:05:14.472 they're like, "Oh yeah, I'll fix it. It'll take me five minutes." 00:05:14.472 --> 00:05:16.975 And then, yeah, it takes them five minutes to fix one thing. 00:05:16.975 --> 00:05:18.818 but then the next thing is not working, 00:05:18.851 --> 00:05:21.611 the next thing, something else breaks, things like that. 00:05:21.611 --> 00:05:25.732 And if we, people who have been in the Wikimedia projects forever, 00:05:25.732 --> 00:05:28.530 can't figure out how this thing works 00:05:28.530 --> 00:05:32.243 and how to get things straightforwardly working, 00:05:32.243 --> 00:05:35.972 then we can't expect communities-- 00:05:35.972 --> 00:05:40.125 language communities that aren't familiar with the Wikimedia projects 00:05:40.125 --> 00:05:42.641 to be able to figure out where to start 00:05:42.641 --> 00:05:45.255 and how to navigate this process. 00:05:45.255 --> 00:05:46.707 It's not possible. 00:05:46.707 --> 00:05:48.350 And there are actual pages 00:05:48.350 --> 00:05:50.701 that people are like, "Oh yeah, there's a page for this." 00:05:50.701 --> 00:05:53.717 And you're going, "But it doesn't come up in Google Search for instance, 00:05:53.717 --> 00:05:55.829 so it's not findable." 00:05:55.829 --> 00:05:58.629 - Do you want to say something about that? - (Susanna) No, that's fine. 00:05:58.629 --> 00:06:03.041 So well we tried to come up with some things 00:06:03.041 --> 00:06:05.332 that should be looked into. 00:06:05.355 --> 00:06:07.235 This is not an exhaustive list, 00:06:07.235 --> 00:06:12.148 but well, obviously, the process needs to be streamlined. 00:06:13.678 --> 00:06:16.379 (Kimberli) The one that I really hate are the language codes. 00:06:16.923 --> 00:06:20.388 Because for instance I did research with [inaudible] 00:06:20.388 --> 00:06:23.333 which is a specific language of its own. 00:06:23.389 --> 00:06:25.347 And there is no ISO code for it. 00:06:25.347 --> 00:06:27.691 There is an ISO code for [inaudible]. 00:06:27.691 --> 00:06:30.175 And they've lumped together two different languages 00:06:30.175 --> 00:06:32.572 that are completely unintelligible to each other. 00:06:32.572 --> 00:06:38.566 And so Wikimedia projects use ISO codes for these type of things. 00:06:38.566 --> 00:06:40.972 And we really think that there should be 00:06:40.972 --> 00:06:43.974 a more fine-grained level to this. 00:06:44.102 --> 00:06:47.418 For Skolt Saami, even though there's only 300 people that speak it, 00:06:47.418 --> 00:06:49.323 we have a lot of data for it. 00:06:49.323 --> 00:06:51.172 And there's four main dialects, 00:06:51.172 --> 00:06:53.815 and the words aren't the same in the four dialects. 00:06:53.815 --> 00:06:56.893 So I would really like to be able to put this is from the Paaččjokk dialect, 00:06:56.893 --> 00:06:59.713 this is from the Suõ´nn’jel dialect, and that type of stuff. 00:06:59.713 --> 00:07:00.751 But we can't do that. 00:07:00.751 --> 00:07:02.012 We can't do that for Spanish. 00:07:02.012 --> 00:07:03.448 We can't do it for English even. 00:07:03.456 --> 00:07:06.653 And so something has to be done about the language codes 00:07:06.653 --> 00:07:08.441 in the Wikimedia projects. 00:07:08.841 --> 00:07:11.567 Yeah, and something that started to happen 00:07:11.567 --> 00:07:17.288 I think is to engage maybe the broader language, 00:07:17.288 --> 00:07:22.242 linguist language communities into the decision-making process, 00:07:22.259 --> 00:07:25.231 and maybe they're like the decisions that need to be made. 00:07:25.231 --> 00:07:29.344 The bureaucracy maybe has to be somehow assessed. 00:07:29.344 --> 00:07:34.624 What are the decisions that are needed in this sphere? 00:07:34.624 --> 00:07:40.377 Like what are the application processes? 00:07:40.377 --> 00:07:43.867 What are the... yeah, so. 00:07:45.116 --> 00:07:48.889 Thanks to Benjamin's presentation today, 00:07:48.889 --> 00:07:50.899 I think PanLex needs to be added to this too. 00:07:50.943 --> 00:07:52.564 (laughing) 00:07:53.194 --> 00:07:56.034 (man) We have individual ISO codes 00:07:56.034 --> 00:07:57.482 for all the languages you mentioned. 00:07:57.722 --> 00:07:59.390 Are you using IETF or... ? 00:07:59.713 --> 00:08:03.543 (man) We start with [inaudible] codes and [inaudible] codes 00:08:03.543 --> 00:08:08.513 and then they can just get a variety ID [inaudible]. 00:08:09.654 --> 00:08:11.879 [inaudible] 00:08:12.420 --> 00:08:15.645 (Kimberli) Good. We'll talk about it more in the Q&A then. 00:08:15.645 --> 00:08:18.101 (moderator) If we can repeat that for the stream 00:08:18.101 --> 00:08:19.418 because it was... 00:08:19.463 --> 00:08:22.315 (Susanna) Okay, I can't. (chuckles) 00:08:23.915 --> 00:08:26.422 - (moderator) We can do it after. - (Susanna) Right. 00:08:29.192 --> 00:08:31.403 (Kimberli) So some of the ways that we work together... 00:08:31.403 --> 00:08:33.254 We work with the communities themselves, 00:08:33.267 --> 00:08:37.592 and we were invited to this 70-year anniversary 00:08:37.592 --> 00:08:39.638 of the Skolts living in Finland. 00:08:39.638 --> 00:08:41.584 They were relocated to Finland 00:08:41.589 --> 00:08:44.102 from when the border was closed off. 00:08:44.118 --> 00:08:46.452 And so they've been living in this area for seven years, 00:08:46.452 --> 00:08:48.128 and there was a big party going on, 00:08:48.128 --> 00:08:49.384 and we were there. 00:08:50.254 --> 00:08:53.257 She was working with little kids putting in Moomin characters 00:08:53.258 --> 00:08:56.882 in the different Saami languages and different words like that. 00:08:58.191 --> 00:09:00.491 Do you want to say something else about that? 00:09:00.499 --> 00:09:03.854 (Susanna) Yeah, just to also pinpoint that. 00:09:03.890 --> 00:09:09.704 We can find new ways of working with data or language 00:09:09.704 --> 00:09:11.434 so we can go to this-- 00:09:11.434 --> 00:09:14.955 We can go together with the communities. 00:09:14.955 --> 00:09:20.840 We want to create participatory methods 00:09:20.840 --> 00:09:23.855 in which we can add more information. 00:09:23.891 --> 00:09:29.159 I think we have come up with this idea of the term of "depictathons" 00:09:29.159 --> 00:09:33.399 now that we can work with images or translateathons which have been 00:09:33.399 --> 00:09:37.097 done earlier as well, but these are the kinds of events 00:09:37.097 --> 00:09:42.895 together with the communities that we can work with the language. 00:09:47.490 --> 00:09:49.778 (Kimberli) So some of the solutions that we have. 00:09:49.914 --> 00:09:52.562 (Susanna) Here are two ideas for next year that we have. 00:09:52.562 --> 00:09:55.609 We are developing and seeing what can be done with them. 00:09:55.917 --> 00:09:59.027 One of them comes as a collaborative project 00:09:59.027 --> 00:10:00.696 together with the Saami archives 00:10:00.696 --> 00:10:06.862 and the Saami museum in Inari in the North of Finland, 00:10:06.862 --> 00:10:11.376 and we could collect cultural heritage concepts 00:10:11.376 --> 00:10:15.278 across these Nordic countries in different Saami languages, 00:10:15.278 --> 00:10:18.978 but not only Saami languages but also in the Nordic languages 00:10:18.978 --> 00:10:23.073 because we share a similar cultural heritage/history 00:10:23.073 --> 00:10:25.733 that we have similar monuments. 00:10:25.733 --> 00:10:29.668 This, of course, came up with a Wiki Loves Monuments competition 00:10:29.668 --> 00:10:33.461 and archeological finds across the area are similar. 00:10:34.265 --> 00:10:37.530 And the other one is place names, 00:10:37.651 --> 00:10:44.312 that is a fortunate new project starting at Wikimedia. 00:10:44.312 --> 00:10:47.656 Norway, that we could expand to be Pan Nordic, 00:10:47.656 --> 00:10:51.037 to include place names in all these. 00:10:51.733 --> 00:10:54.553 - Pan Saami. - Pan Saami, ooh. 00:10:57.733 --> 00:10:59.577 (Kimberli) So these are depictathons. 00:10:59.779 --> 00:11:02.838 The Skolt Saami-- there are thousands of pictures 00:11:02.838 --> 00:11:04.733 of the Skolt Saami in Commons. 00:11:04.733 --> 00:11:08.298 They come from different archives, and they have data, 00:11:08.298 --> 00:11:12.855 the structured data on them is basically from 100 years ago 00:11:12.855 --> 00:11:15.405 so it's describing things in the way that they would have been 00:11:15.405 --> 00:11:16.979 described 100 years ago. 00:11:16.988 --> 00:11:20.746 We don't want those, those ways of description there anymore 00:11:20.746 --> 00:11:23.913 because a lot of them are racist, quite racist. 00:11:24.235 --> 00:11:25.936 We don't want them. 00:11:26.305 --> 00:11:27.739 The community doesn't want them. 00:11:27.739 --> 00:11:30.920 The community wants to be able to write what they want to say 00:11:30.920 --> 00:11:32.579 about the pictures in their own language, 00:11:32.579 --> 00:11:35.518 or in Finnish or Norwegian or Swedish. 00:11:35.518 --> 00:11:39.351 And so we've been having depictathons as an idea that-- 00:11:39.351 --> 00:11:41.435 well, we've done it. 00:11:41.435 --> 00:11:45.487 So people can change the captions, change the descriptions 00:11:45.487 --> 00:11:48.120 of these pictures in Commons, 00:11:48.120 --> 00:11:51.238 and you work with structured data so I'll let you talk about that. 00:11:52.555 --> 00:11:55.140 (Susanna) Yeah, and well, let's see our next slide 00:11:55.140 --> 00:11:57.561 because this is just as-- 00:11:57.618 --> 00:12:02.587 you all know structured data on Commons so for you this is no news. 00:12:02.819 --> 00:12:08.782 And I think, well from these, we also enter delicate questions 00:12:08.782 --> 00:12:12.731 of what are the descriptions, 00:12:12.731 --> 00:12:15.168 but we'll come back to that. 00:12:16.517 --> 00:12:19.102 (Kimberli) In the Northern Saami, we've been creating 00:12:19.102 --> 00:12:22.400 autogenerated Wikidata info boxes. 00:12:22.400 --> 00:12:25.166 They've been pulling in data from Wikidata 00:12:25.166 --> 00:12:28.199 because I'm the one person that's correcting everything 00:12:28.199 --> 00:12:29.970 in the Northern Saami Wikipedia, 00:12:29.970 --> 00:12:32.706 and I don't have time to change every mayor, 00:12:32.706 --> 00:12:35.283 the population of every country, things like that. 00:12:35.323 --> 00:12:39.676 So I've been really blessed with the people 00:12:39.676 --> 00:12:43.017 that have come up and started helping create these info boxes. 00:12:43.017 --> 00:12:46.363 And it's expanded the amount of knowledge 00:12:46.363 --> 00:12:49.096 we have in the Northern Saami Wikipedia greatly. 00:12:51.503 --> 00:12:53.893 So this is Nils-Aslak Valkeapää, 00:12:53.987 --> 00:12:58.540 who is one of the most famous Saami multi-talent--he's a polymath. 00:12:58.587 --> 00:13:02.013 I mean, he was a singer, a writer, 00:13:02.853 --> 00:13:08.436 artist, and we now have this info box there for him, 00:13:08.488 --> 00:13:10.989 all of the data which is pulled from Wikidata. 00:13:12.309 --> 00:13:15.179 Before we had maybe three lines and no picture. 00:13:15.179 --> 00:13:17.174 (Susanna) And this applies specifically 00:13:17.174 --> 00:13:19.516 of course to the languages that have a Wikipedia. 00:13:19.516 --> 00:13:21.584 (Kimberli) Yeah, but doesn't work in an incubator. 00:13:21.584 --> 00:13:22.675 (Susanna) Yep. 00:13:23.762 --> 00:13:26.188 This is quite exciting now. 00:13:26.188 --> 00:13:27.815 Once we have the-- 00:13:27.815 --> 00:13:31.493 well, we are not working with lexicographical data, 00:13:31.493 --> 00:13:34.445 like specifically. 00:13:34.445 --> 00:13:36.900 We will extend to it, 00:13:36.939 --> 00:13:43.967 but we are concerned mainly about labels and items so far. 00:13:44.586 --> 00:13:50.205 So what this makes possible is tagging content, 00:13:50.205 --> 00:13:54.585 museums, libraries as well as broadcasters. 00:13:54.607 --> 00:13:56.349 Yle, the Finnish Broadcasting Company 00:13:56.349 --> 00:13:59.741 as they are already using the Wikidata for tagging, 00:13:59.741 --> 00:14:04.545 this might be an opportunity for the small Saami languages 00:14:04.545 --> 00:14:06.498 in the Nordic area. 00:14:06.749 --> 00:14:09.955 And this is my opportunity to show 00:14:09.955 --> 00:14:11.940 my project Wikidocumentaries as well 00:14:11.940 --> 00:14:16.246 because it is a project that reads-- 00:14:16.500 --> 00:14:20.997 well, it's difficult to make the change... 00:14:20.997 --> 00:14:23.647 Let me have [inaudible] help. 00:14:29.746 --> 00:14:31.125 Yeah, there. 00:14:31.344 --> 00:14:36.093 So here we have a page in Wikidocumentaries, 00:14:36.093 --> 00:14:38.367 which is now in English. 00:14:38.367 --> 00:14:44.273 This is a project that consumes information from the Wikimedia sphere. 00:14:44.506 --> 00:14:48.794 Every item in Wikidata has a page, 00:14:48.794 --> 00:14:53.449 or can be made into a page 00:14:53.449 --> 00:14:56.083 or is automatically created into a page. 00:14:56.083 --> 00:15:00.882 Then it gathers all this information across Wikimedia projects, 00:15:03.952 --> 00:15:09.238 and the interface exists already in 40 plus languages, 00:15:09.768 --> 00:15:13.147 and I would be able to change the interface 00:15:14.417 --> 00:15:19.640 and then see all the same data in another language. 00:15:19.898 --> 00:15:25.429 I could also, as you can see, or you were able to see 00:15:25.429 --> 00:15:28.832 in the English one, that there is no article on this 00:15:28.832 --> 00:15:30.873 in the English Wikipedia. 00:15:30.873 --> 00:15:33.700 Therefore you could go to see which languages it exists, 00:15:33.700 --> 00:15:36.359 and this one is in Northern Saami. 00:15:36.653 --> 00:15:40.857 So you would be able to switch only the article language. 00:15:41.076 --> 00:15:48.324 But also then it can also display any language 00:15:49.694 --> 00:15:54.013 that is encoded in Wikidata. 00:15:54.179 --> 00:15:59.148 So we also get it in the same page in Skolt Saami. 00:15:59.148 --> 00:16:01.454 Although, there is no Wikipedia, 00:16:01.454 --> 00:16:04.874 you get all the same content 00:16:04.874 --> 00:16:07.428 in these languages. 00:16:07.428 --> 00:16:09.477 (Kimberli) There is actually an article about her 00:16:09.477 --> 00:16:10.971 in Skolt Saami on the incubator, 00:16:10.986 --> 00:16:13.247 but it doesn't work with Wikidocumentaries 00:16:13.247 --> 00:16:16.620 because of the way the incubator is encoded. 00:16:16.929 --> 00:16:18.439 (Susanna) Oh yeah. 00:16:19.269 --> 00:16:25.956 And just briefly, I'm very excited in thinking about an app 00:16:25.959 --> 00:16:31.373 that will gamify this or like collecting these terms 00:16:31.373 --> 00:16:32.910 into Wikidata. 00:16:33.457 --> 00:16:38.928 But I haven't landed on one, and I'm sure there are experiences 00:16:38.928 --> 00:16:43.143 of that across this community, 00:16:43.143 --> 00:16:47.594 and it would be interesting to put together our thoughts on that. 00:16:48.393 --> 00:16:50.367 (Kimberli) So there's quite a few challenges 00:16:50.367 --> 00:16:52.467 that we have in these projects. 00:16:52.467 --> 00:16:53.967 This picture, if you come across it 00:16:53.967 --> 00:16:55.910 on any Wikipedia please delete it. 00:16:55.943 --> 00:16:58.723 It's two Finns dressed as Saami people. 00:16:58.723 --> 00:17:01.709 It's labeled fake Saami clothing, 00:17:01.709 --> 00:17:04.829 and people still use it on Wikipedia projects. 00:17:05.419 --> 00:17:06.832 I don't know why. 00:17:06.832 --> 00:17:08.861 So we have false data. 00:17:08.861 --> 00:17:10.471 We have racist--and with the Saami, 00:17:10.471 --> 00:17:12.047 we have a lot of eugenics-based data. 00:17:12.047 --> 00:17:14.719 So when they were trying to prove that the Saami were a lower race 00:17:14.719 --> 00:17:17.214 so they could sterilize them and things like that, 00:17:17.214 --> 00:17:18.383 we have a lot of that data 00:17:18.383 --> 00:17:20.680 because that's the stuff that comes out of archives. 00:17:20.819 --> 00:17:23.796 Data usage--data has been used without the consent 00:17:23.796 --> 00:17:25.331 of the communities, 00:17:25.331 --> 00:17:29.587 and for instance, the Skolt community was kind of shocked to see 00:17:29.587 --> 00:17:32.048 that their relatives are in Commons, 00:17:32.048 --> 00:17:34.899 and they weren't very appreciative of it. 00:17:35.206 --> 00:17:38.223 Sensitive data, which Stacy can talk more about. 00:17:39.559 --> 00:17:41.999 Yeah, this is used on the Hungarian Wikipedia. 00:17:42.060 --> 00:17:45.108 Here's that lovely picture 00:17:45.108 --> 00:17:48.116 describing that these people are Saami people. 00:17:48.116 --> 00:17:49.382 Please delete it. 00:17:49.789 --> 00:17:54.574 Yeah, this is more what Stacy will talk about. 00:17:55.264 --> 00:17:57.043 (Susanna) Leave it to you? 00:18:00.574 --> 00:18:01.970 (Kimberli) Sensitive data. 00:18:02.191 --> 00:18:04.359 TK labels--you want to talk about before. 00:18:04.444 --> 00:18:06.456 (Susanna) You're not addressing them. 00:18:06.456 --> 00:18:12.523 I think we could also look into identifying content 00:18:12.523 --> 00:18:16.191 already on Commons or just about to enter Commons, 00:18:16.191 --> 00:18:23.477 how to tag and identify, tag and perhaps delete 00:18:23.506 --> 00:18:29.971 or then find out restricting the usage of this media. 00:18:30.694 --> 00:18:32.840 Well, it's very short, 00:18:32.840 --> 00:18:37.778 but let's see if we have more opportunities to discuss that. 00:18:40.129 --> 00:18:42.126 (Kimberli) We can skip this part. 00:18:42.150 --> 00:18:43.221 Sorry. 00:18:43.330 --> 00:18:45.564 I want to say that this is the week 00:18:45.564 --> 00:18:47.365 of the Saami Language Week this week 00:18:47.365 --> 00:18:52.943 so please feel free to use hashtags for Saami languages. 00:18:53.091 --> 00:18:54.675 Gæjhtoe! 00:18:54.675 --> 00:18:56.243 (Susanna) Spä'sseb! 00:18:56.243 --> 00:18:57.543 (Kimberli) Spä'sseb! 00:18:57.543 --> 00:18:58.696 Takkâ. 00:18:58.696 --> 00:19:01.556 (applause)