 I'm Emily Tempelwood. I'm a wikipedia from Chicago, Illinois. I'm the vice president of wikimedia DC I've been editing wikipedia since I was 12. My favorite band was U2, so I wrote a lot about like their music Which really pleased my dad who's like a huge classic rock fan. I did a lot of like stub sorting And a lot of anti-vandalism work. I became an admin when I was 13 Um, so I was able to be really productive on the administrative side of things because it didn't require access to sources it didn't require, you know knowledge of any deep subject it just required knowledge of wikipedia policy which Was something that I could pick up at that age. My baby is wikiproject women scientists I am so proud of what we've created there We had like 14 or 1500 articles on women scientists Out of what we estimated was 3000 and what we now estimate is more like four or five thousand that needed to be created And in 18 months we got up to More than like 2,500 women scientists. I started as a pilot series of workshops focusing on women scientists That tested some hypotheses we had about editor retention and what came out of that was a kit to do the same thing In the most successful way at any institution So i'm kind of running with that and creating that and inspiring people to teach others to focus And run workshops on things that matter to them. We don't know until we engage more women in editing wikipedia what we're missing because My god, someone might be an expert on You know female writers from nicaragua and there's like one woman who's the expert scholar on that We don't know what we're missing What we're losing with all of these perspectives. I can guess I can conjecture Because we were missing, you know a thousand women scientists 18 months ago and now we have them But what's the next women scientist going to be? You know, what's the next massive Content gap we're going to find because we engaged, you know, someone who wasn't engaged before