 It's a 3% done of 365 climate edits. So hello, my name is Jan Einle, or user Einle on the Wikis. I'm the co-founder of Wikimedia for Sustainable Development, and I've been around in the movement for quite some time. Hello. And this project was inspired by a very great project, 100 Wikidays challenge, which is a challenge where you compete towards yourself or with yourself to create one new article a day for 100 days in a row. And many people have done this, and it's become a thing, and there's people doing it over and over and so forth. And two years ago in Wikimedia, I was giving a talk about how we should use the Sustainable Development goals as our topics for impact, which is part of the strategy recommendations to select all that and what topics to write about. And these two ideas sort of connected in my head. So for 2022, I had a New Year's resolution, which I talked about in a podcast I'm creating, that I should make one new article about the climate per week. And I was giving myself just one per week instead of one per day, because I knew I was very busy. But even that turned out to be too hard, because writing articles about the climate, it's a tricky topic, it requires a lot of research. So I failed quite miserably, and I knew quite early. So I need to rethink this, because I didn't want to give up on the idea. So what I came up with instead was, well, if I just make a small edit, then I can build a habit. And if I make a small edit, I can make it more often. And that will also be better to build a habit. So why don't I try to make at least one edit every day for a full year? And that was the idea behind the 365 climate edits. To really get into the topic space and get a feel for what's happening, always stay up to date and always adding and improving incrementally like we do on the Wikimedia projects. So how is this going then? Well, it's quite fun. And it's actually building a habit. And the edits themselves aren't that hard. It's usually quite quick to make the edit. And the fun and the tricky part is to figure out what to edit in, because there's so much things that you can do. And I'll show you a few examples later. Life is also unpredictable and hard sometimes. And my father passed away, but thanks to already building a habit, this also helps me in a sense to get a sense. I managed to edit even through that period. However, falling in love was even harder because that made me miss one day. So I'm one day not done with this edit. But it's not only me who's on this challenge on this journey. So there's 14 other people to join and anyone can join at any time. It hasn't to be an exact calendar year. So you can join in whenever you want and you just note your date and then try to go for 365 days in a row. And you can be as hard on yourself as you want to. This is mostly a challenge for yourself to build a habit in the 100 Wikidays challenge. People are usually very hard on themselves and start over, so you do as you want with that. But it's also very hard to get good statistics on this because we're doing this across all different projects. There is a tool, a hashtag search tool where if you add a hashtag in your edit summary, you can search for them there. But it has a few drawbacks. So for one, it doesn't scan Wikidata at all yet. I don't know why, but that's the case. So those edits are sort of missing in the tool and I edit Wikidata a lot. So the challenge is not to prove to anyone else, it's to prove to yourself. So if you know you've made an edit, that's fine. And then it's also hard, like if you upload a Wikimedia image to Wikimedia Commons, that won't give you normally a chance to do an edit summary and the same if you use the translation tool, then you can't. And then you might think, why aren't you using a dashboard? But of course, this is just one edit per day and most Wikimedians are much more active than so. So that would sort of totally be a mess in that if you try to track one Wikimedians edits for an entire year, it will be all over the place. Or you would have to sort of manually add each article and even that would be messy. So I see this mostly as a way for yourself to complete the challenge and we'll take your word for it if you do. And then if we think about edits, it's very hard. So we can sort of estimate that on this Thursday when this is on Wikimedia, if taking consideration when people were joining, then we should have over 3,000 edits. No one has reported themselves to have dropped out. And if everybody completes a year, these 14, that will be over 5,000 edits. But of course, you can also join right now and make this number even higher. But then again, it's not about the number per se. I think this is about building a habit to be connected to the topic area, to get your feels for what's going on and what's needed, what's missing and what you like to be doing because even if this is a challenge, it's supposed to be a fun challenge and edit out of joy. So let's show a couple of example of what people have been doing over the time. And very straightforward thing is to correct grammar or correct typos. Here we see just a verb being changed and you see the 365 climate edits hashtag in the edit summary. So that's how we can find them like this. Or you can add sources, always valuable. Even if you don't need add extra text to it, that will be super good for the next reader that comes here. Or you can add media. If you find on commons not being used, there's even campaigns about this. I think it's called WPWP campaign, Wikipedia, wanting pictures or something like that. So that is also very good. And you can sort of compete or be in two challenges at the same time. Or you can go out and take photos of things that are connected. And here's an electric car with solar roof which is sort of connected to climate but you can also in WikiLabs Earth find this or there are other campaigns like Wiki for Human Rights. Also fits into this even though that's not a photo challenge. And you can edit Wiki data and those are very atomic so it's quite easy but it's often also very valuable to add these small things because that connects the net and makes things queryable. So even this edit that seems quite small makes it possible to connect which laws are connected to global warming which might be a super interesting query in the future. Or you can do something a little bit more with sources which is always good. And here we can also see me trying to use the 365 climate edits on Wiki data but it does not show up in the two hashtags search too. And then of course you can create like scenes on Wiki data and here's an example of something I did in one day but of course this is there are maybe 10 edits to get it because it's so, but they're also quite small. So sometimes I like to just do like a small task in Wiki data even if it's more than one edit. I think that's quite fun and it's also fun, fine and fun. And then we have our great translation tool which I really enjoy working with but it also has the drawback you can't really add a hashtag in it but often you also need to go in and polish it afterwards there's a few things and sometimes you some things you might be missing some templates that you use in your Wiki that wasn't in the source Wiki that you go in it and then of course you can add the hashtag in those edits. So I invite you all to join the 365 climate edits. It's a challenge for yourself and you just sign up and you start and you can start today or you can start tomorrow or in a week, it doesn't really matter. It's a challenge for yourself to build your own habit. Thank you.