 A lot can happen in a wiki minute, like the 60 seconds of everything that happens on wiki-media projects. Or even the time it takes to answer, does the content on Wikipedia reflect the world's diversity? Wikipedia is the free encyclopedia everyone can edit, and nearly 300,000 volunteers do that every month. But because Wikipedia is powered by humans, it can become vulnerable to historical biases. And it's also a product of who participates. That is one of the reasons why we're missing out on knowledge that represents a lot of our world's population. For instance, by 2022, less than 20% of all biographies on English Wikipedia were about women. And the numbers were even smaller when it comes to LGBTQ rights as communities, people with disabilities, and those in the global majority. But that's changing. Wiki-medians all over the world are working on initiatives to achieve knowledge equity, a commitment to focus on knowledge and communities that have been left out by structures of power and privilege. Together, we can close these gaps and set knowledge free. And that's why content on Wikipedia doesn't reflect the whole world's diversity in one minute.