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Wikiversity:Colloquium
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2808915
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2026-05-13T15:16:46Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
/* Inactivity policy for Curators */ reply to Jtneill ([[mw:c:Special:MyLanguage/User:JWBTH/CD|CD]])
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{{Wikiversity:Colloquium/Header}}
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== Requested update to [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] ==
Currently, [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] is a policy that includes a caveat that interface admins are not required long-term and that user right can only be added for a period of up to two weeks. I am proposing that we remove this qualification and allow for indefinite interface admin status. I think this is useful because there are reasons for tweaking the site CSS or JavaScript (e.g. to comply with dark mode), add gadgets (e.g. importing Cat-a-Lot, which I would like to do), or otherwise modifying the site that could plausibly come up on an irregular basis and requiring the overhead of a bureaucrat to add the user rights is inefficient. In particular, I am also going to request this right if the community accepts indefinite interface admins. Thoughts? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:23, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:And who will then monitor them to make sure they don't damage the project in any way, or abuse the rights acquired in this way? For large projects, this might not be a problem, but for smaller projects like the English Wikiversity, I'm not sure if there are enough users who would say, something is happening here that shouldn't be happening. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:28, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
::Anyone would be who. This argument applies to any person with any advanced rights here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 10:46, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
:I think it is reasonable to allow for longer periods of access than 2 weeks to interface admin and support adjusting the policy to allow for this flexibility. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:57, 2 December 2025 (UTC)
::+1 —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] I agree that the two-week requirement could be revised, but wouldn’t people just request access for a specific purpose anyway? Instead of granting indefinite access, they should request the specific time frame they need the rights for—until the planned fixes are completed—and then request an extension if more time is required. We could remove the two-week criterion while still keeping the access explicitly temporary. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:48, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
::I just don't see why this wiki needs to be different than all of the others. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 07:18, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:::There isn’t really much of a need for a permanent one at this point in time [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:53, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:I quite agree with this proposal, so long as they perform the suggested changes as mentioned here. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 04:06, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:: Just to clarify, I support '''indefinite interface admin status'''. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:34, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:I think there is decent consensus for lengthening this, but not necessarily for indefinite permissions, so does anyone object to me revising it to the standard being 120 days instead of two weeks? I'll check back on this thread in three weeks and if there's no objection, I'll make the change. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:47, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sure [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:27, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks for proposing this, Justin. I agree with the proposal to lengthen the interface admin period from 2 weeks but not indefinitely. Can I check the source(s) for the standard being 120 days (I'm guessing policies on other projects or maybe global policy?)? In any case, I think it is reasonable for us to adopt a similar period. However, note on the current policy discussion page notes from @[[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] arguing for shorter periods to lower risk, that's why it is 2 weeks. But if there are projects that need longer access, that should also be accommodated. Maybe we could adjust the policy to specify that ''interface admin rights can be given for 14 to 120 days depending on how long is required and what is supported by the community''. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::There was there was no source for 120: it was just more than 14 and less than infinity. The "14 to 120" also seems reasonable. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:33, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::: On some small/medium-sized wikis, such as English Wikibooks and English Wikiquote for example, indefinite interface administrator access for administrators is allowed, but they tend not to make changes to the CSS and JS page changes unless it's truly necessary. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:34, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::It's a good idea to make the length of this right on request or allow to be prolonged. However, IA should test large changes somewhere else, for example on the en.wv mirror, and only after testing it on the mirror, adapt it to the live version. That means I can't imagine a time-consuming operation right now. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:04, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Sorry, what mirror is this? Are you talking about beta.wv? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:32, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::Not beta.wv. Basically somewhere else then on a live wiki. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: Wouldn't testing on a user's own common.css page work anyway? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:36, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:Change made here: https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity%3AInterface_administrators&diff=2807543&oldid=2806289 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 13:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Requested update to [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] ==
Currently, [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] is a policy that includes a caveat that interface admins are not required long-term and that user right can only be added for a period of up to two weeks. I am proposing that we remove this qualification and allow for indefinite interface admin status. I think this is useful because there are reasons for tweaking the site CSS or JavaScript (e.g. to comply with dark mode), add gadgets (e.g. importing Cat-a-Lot, which I would like to do), or otherwise modifying the site that could plausibly come up on an irregular basis and requiring the overhead of a bureaucrat to add the user rights is inefficient. In particular, I am also going to request this right if the community accepts indefinite interface admins. Thoughts? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:23, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:And who will then monitor them to make sure they don't damage the project in any way, or abuse the rights acquired in this way? For large projects, this might not be a problem, but for smaller projects like the English Wikiversity, I'm not sure if there are enough users who would say, something is happening here that shouldn't be happening. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:28, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
::Anyone would be who. This argument applies to any person with any advanced rights here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 10:46, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
:I think it is reasonable to allow for longer periods of access than 2 weeks to interface admin and support adjusting the policy to allow for this flexibility. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:57, 2 December 2025 (UTC)
::+1 —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] I agree that the two-week requirement could be revised, but wouldn’t people just request access for a specific purpose anyway? Instead of granting indefinite access, they should request the specific time frame they need the rights for—until the planned fixes are completed—and then request an extension if more time is required. We could remove the two-week criterion while still keeping the access explicitly temporary. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:48, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
::I just don't see why this wiki needs to be different than all of the others. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 07:18, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:::There isn’t really much of a need for a permanent one at this point in time [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:53, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:I quite agree with this proposal, so long as they perform the suggested changes as mentioned here. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 04:06, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:: Just to clarify, I support '''indefinite interface admin status'''. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:34, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:I think there is decent consensus for lengthening this, but not necessarily for indefinite permissions, so does anyone object to me revising it to the standard being 120 days instead of two weeks? I'll check back on this thread in three weeks and if there's no objection, I'll make the change. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:47, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sure [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:27, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks for proposing this, Justin. I agree with the proposal to lengthen the interface admin period from 2 weeks but not indefinitely. Can I check the source(s) for the standard being 120 days (I'm guessing policies on other projects or maybe global policy?)? In any case, I think it is reasonable for us to adopt a similar period. However, note on the current policy discussion page notes from @[[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] arguing for shorter periods to lower risk, that's why it is 2 weeks. But if there are projects that need longer access, that should also be accommodated. Maybe we could adjust the policy to specify that ''interface admin rights can be given for 14 to 120 days depending on how long is required and what is supported by the community''. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::There was there was no source for 120: it was just more than 14 and less than infinity. The "14 to 120" also seems reasonable. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:33, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::: On some small/medium-sized wikis, such as English Wikibooks and English Wikiquote for example, indefinite interface administrator access for administrators is allowed, but they tend not to make changes to the CSS and JS page changes unless it's truly necessary. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:34, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::It's a good idea to make the length of this right on request or allow to be prolonged. However, IA should test large changes somewhere else, for example on the en.wv mirror, and only after testing it on the mirror, adapt it to the live version. That means I can't imagine a time-consuming operation right now. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:04, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Sorry, what mirror is this? Are you talking about beta.wv? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:32, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::Not beta.wv. Basically somewhere else then on a live wiki. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: Wouldn't testing on a user's own common.css page work anyway? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:36, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:Change made here: https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity%3AInterface_administrators&diff=2807543&oldid=2806289 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 13:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
5gad3vwzqikjmn6waui4p5ay0hgzwng
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== Requested update to [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] ==
Currently, [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] is a policy that includes a caveat that interface admins are not required long-term and that user right can only be added for a period of up to two weeks. I am proposing that we remove this qualification and allow for indefinite interface admin status. I think this is useful because there are reasons for tweaking the site CSS or JavaScript (e.g. to comply with dark mode), add gadgets (e.g. importing Cat-a-Lot, which I would like to do), or otherwise modifying the site that could plausibly come up on an irregular basis and requiring the overhead of a bureaucrat to add the user rights is inefficient. In particular, I am also going to request this right if the community accepts indefinite interface admins. Thoughts? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:23, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:And who will then monitor them to make sure they don't damage the project in any way, or abuse the rights acquired in this way? For large projects, this might not be a problem, but for smaller projects like the English Wikiversity, I'm not sure if there are enough users who would say, something is happening here that shouldn't be happening. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:28, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
::Anyone would be who. This argument applies to any person with any advanced rights here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 10:46, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
:I think it is reasonable to allow for longer periods of access than 2 weeks to interface admin and support adjusting the policy to allow for this flexibility. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:57, 2 December 2025 (UTC)
::+1 —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] I agree that the two-week requirement could be revised, but wouldn’t people just request access for a specific purpose anyway? Instead of granting indefinite access, they should request the specific time frame they need the rights for—until the planned fixes are completed—and then request an extension if more time is required. We could remove the two-week criterion while still keeping the access explicitly temporary. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:48, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
::I just don't see why this wiki needs to be different than all of the others. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 07:18, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:::There isn’t really much of a need for a permanent one at this point in time [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:53, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:I quite agree with this proposal, so long as they perform the suggested changes as mentioned here. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 04:06, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:: Just to clarify, I support '''indefinite interface admin status'''. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:34, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:I think there is decent consensus for lengthening this, but not necessarily for indefinite permissions, so does anyone object to me revising it to the standard being 120 days instead of two weeks? I'll check back on this thread in three weeks and if there's no objection, I'll make the change. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:47, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sure [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:27, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks for proposing this, Justin. I agree with the proposal to lengthen the interface admin period from 2 weeks but not indefinitely. Can I check the source(s) for the standard being 120 days (I'm guessing policies on other projects or maybe global policy?)? In any case, I think it is reasonable for us to adopt a similar period. However, note on the current policy discussion page notes from @[[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] arguing for shorter periods to lower risk, that's why it is 2 weeks. But if there are projects that need longer access, that should also be accommodated. Maybe we could adjust the policy to specify that ''interface admin rights can be given for 14 to 120 days depending on how long is required and what is supported by the community''. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::There was there was no source for 120: it was just more than 14 and less than infinity. The "14 to 120" also seems reasonable. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:33, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::: On some small/medium-sized wikis, such as English Wikibooks and English Wikiquote for example, indefinite interface administrator access for administrators is allowed, but they tend not to make changes to the CSS and JS page changes unless it's truly necessary. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:34, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::It's a good idea to make the length of this right on request or allow to be prolonged. However, IA should test large changes somewhere else, for example on the en.wv mirror, and only after testing it on the mirror, adapt it to the live version. That means I can't imagine a time-consuming operation right now. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:04, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Sorry, what mirror is this? Are you talking about beta.wv? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:32, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::Not beta.wv. Basically somewhere else then on a live wiki. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: Wouldn't testing on a user's own common.css page work anyway? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:36, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:Change made here: https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity%3AInterface_administrators&diff=2807543&oldid=2806289 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 13:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
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:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
jplvpi3h7j053djh288yn1bv67b0iqc
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/* Coming over From wikinews */ Reply
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== Requested update to [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] ==
Currently, [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] is a policy that includes a caveat that interface admins are not required long-term and that user right can only be added for a period of up to two weeks. I am proposing that we remove this qualification and allow for indefinite interface admin status. I think this is useful because there are reasons for tweaking the site CSS or JavaScript (e.g. to comply with dark mode), add gadgets (e.g. importing Cat-a-Lot, which I would like to do), or otherwise modifying the site that could plausibly come up on an irregular basis and requiring the overhead of a bureaucrat to add the user rights is inefficient. In particular, I am also going to request this right if the community accepts indefinite interface admins. Thoughts? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:23, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:And who will then monitor them to make sure they don't damage the project in any way, or abuse the rights acquired in this way? For large projects, this might not be a problem, but for smaller projects like the English Wikiversity, I'm not sure if there are enough users who would say, something is happening here that shouldn't be happening. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:28, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
::Anyone would be who. This argument applies to any person with any advanced rights here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 10:46, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
:I think it is reasonable to allow for longer periods of access than 2 weeks to interface admin and support adjusting the policy to allow for this flexibility. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:57, 2 December 2025 (UTC)
::+1 —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] I agree that the two-week requirement could be revised, but wouldn’t people just request access for a specific purpose anyway? Instead of granting indefinite access, they should request the specific time frame they need the rights for—until the planned fixes are completed—and then request an extension if more time is required. We could remove the two-week criterion while still keeping the access explicitly temporary. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:48, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
::I just don't see why this wiki needs to be different than all of the others. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 07:18, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:::There isn’t really much of a need for a permanent one at this point in time [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:53, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:I quite agree with this proposal, so long as they perform the suggested changes as mentioned here. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 04:06, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:: Just to clarify, I support '''indefinite interface admin status'''. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:34, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:I think there is decent consensus for lengthening this, but not necessarily for indefinite permissions, so does anyone object to me revising it to the standard being 120 days instead of two weeks? I'll check back on this thread in three weeks and if there's no objection, I'll make the change. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:47, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sure [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:27, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks for proposing this, Justin. I agree with the proposal to lengthen the interface admin period from 2 weeks but not indefinitely. Can I check the source(s) for the standard being 120 days (I'm guessing policies on other projects or maybe global policy?)? In any case, I think it is reasonable for us to adopt a similar period. However, note on the current policy discussion page notes from @[[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] arguing for shorter periods to lower risk, that's why it is 2 weeks. But if there are projects that need longer access, that should also be accommodated. Maybe we could adjust the policy to specify that ''interface admin rights can be given for 14 to 120 days depending on how long is required and what is supported by the community''. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::There was there was no source for 120: it was just more than 14 and less than infinity. The "14 to 120" also seems reasonable. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:33, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::: On some small/medium-sized wikis, such as English Wikibooks and English Wikiquote for example, indefinite interface administrator access for administrators is allowed, but they tend not to make changes to the CSS and JS page changes unless it's truly necessary. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:34, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::It's a good idea to make the length of this right on request or allow to be prolonged. However, IA should test large changes somewhere else, for example on the en.wv mirror, and only after testing it on the mirror, adapt it to the live version. That means I can't imagine a time-consuming operation right now. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:04, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Sorry, what mirror is this? Are you talking about beta.wv? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:32, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::Not beta.wv. Basically somewhere else then on a live wiki. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: Wouldn't testing on a user's own common.css page work anyway? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:36, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:Change made here: https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity%3AInterface_administrators&diff=2807543&oldid=2806289 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 13:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
ne3ph9wbgs7jx0dlxe8rwtqoinkfn6x
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Codename Noreste
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/* Requested update to Wikiversity:Interface administrators */ archive to [[Wikiversity:Colloquium/archives/August 2025#Requested update to Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] ([[mw:c:Special:MyLanguage/User:JWBTH/CD|CD]])
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{{Wikiversity:Colloquium/Header}}
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== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
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== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
pzwhc85t2mvd6je6i2qi8fmgrstkcs7
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==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians.
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
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/* Create a pseudo-bot user group? */ edit opening comment ([[mw:c:Special:MyLanguage/User:JWBTH/CD|CD]])
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
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:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
bd4nv26bdb8u7yi7kr7qfence5al0wc
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/* Proposal to rehost Wikinews here */
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text/x-wiki
{{Wikiversity:Colloquium/Header}}
<!-- MESSAGES GO BELOW -->
== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
njwqaqbd6p1kek0rc3u86j60wo94tkf
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Moving thread about "Coming over From wikinews" to immediately precede proposal to include Wikinews
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{{Wikiversity:Colloquium/Header}}
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
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/* Proposal to rehost Wikinews here */ Reply
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
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:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:Definitely worthy of discussion, so I have no problem with the proposal in the sitenotice.
:Initial questions:
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
:* What are "active editions"?
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:52, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
:Definitely worthy of discussion, so I have no problem with the proposal in the sitenotice.
:Initial questions:
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
:* What are "active editions"?
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:52, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
:Definitely worthy of discussion, so I have no problem with the proposal in the sitenotice.
:Initial questions:
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
:* What are "active editions"?
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:52, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
::*No, not at this time.
:* What are "active editions"?
::*There were 30 other active editions of Wikinews in addition to English (e.g. [[:n:es:]]) at the time of universal closure (2026-05-04).
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
::*One of the biggest issues was the problems with DPL, which is now irrelevant. Another was the lack of activity, which can be ameliorated by having it be part of an existing project instead of its own domain (e.g. some editions of Wikipedia host their own Wikinews already and those projects were not impacted by the closure).
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
::*Not at this juncture. I would also propose as far as implemention goes that we would request a new namespace and that the material be more-or-less sequestered into its own ongoing project, like Wikijournal is or like the Cookbook and Wikijunior are at our sister [[:b:]].
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
::*The process of citizen journalists practicing their craft in real-time and collaborating with others to do so is itself an education activity. We would essentially be hosting a real-time experiment in citizen journalism, online communities, and collaborative learning in addition to the prospect of spreading educational information from someone actually reading the news. I would propose that we could also make a more deliberate attempt to engage with learning <em>about</em> what does and doesn't work with collaborative news writing by experimentation (e.g. audio news, syndicating to other sites, incorporating freely-licensed news from other sources, writing hyper-local news, writing briefs versus longer-term reportage) and also seeing if the problems noted in the Task Force report that recommended closure can be overcome. Note that we have already done some local investigation about and learning about wiki-based journalism on Wikinews here at [[Journalism studies and Wikinews]]. We could continue that learning and refine the process, including incorporating journalism students from universities. As for tensions, Wikinews is the only sister project that must be done with a quick turn-around: if you take a long time to [[:s:|transcribe a book]], that's just how long it takes, but if you take a long time to write news, it ceases to be news entirely. Wikiversity has been a very slow-growing project that has definitely had some successes but has generally come together over a long period with most learning resources being individual passion projects (or sometimes, frankly, crankery) which would not work with collaborative news that requires more than just a single editor writing whatever he feels like.
::Please let me know any other questions/concerns and any other editors feel free to give your own perspective. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:13, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
*:{{support}}, hope to seeing ideas about this, and thank you @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 11:08, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
:Definitely worthy of discussion, so I have no problem with the proposal in the sitenotice.
:Initial questions:
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
:* What are "active editions"?
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:52, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
::*No, not at this time.
:* What are "active editions"?
::*There were 30 other active editions of Wikinews in addition to English (e.g. [[:n:es:]]) at the time of universal closure (2026-05-04).
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
::*One of the biggest issues was the problems with DPL, which is now irrelevant. Another was the lack of activity, which can be ameliorated by having it be part of an existing project instead of its own domain (e.g. some editions of Wikipedia host their own Wikinews already and those projects were not impacted by the closure).
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
::*Not at this juncture. I would also propose as far as implemention goes that we would request a new namespace and that the material be more-or-less sequestered into its own ongoing project, like Wikijournal is or like the Cookbook and Wikijunior are at our sister [[:b:]].
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
::*The process of citizen journalists practicing their craft in real-time and collaborating with others to do so is itself an education activity. We would essentially be hosting a real-time experiment in citizen journalism, online communities, and collaborative learning in addition to the prospect of spreading educational information from someone actually reading the news. I would propose that we could also make a more deliberate attempt to engage with learning <em>about</em> what does and doesn't work with collaborative news writing by experimentation (e.g. audio news, syndicating to other sites, incorporating freely-licensed news from other sources, writing hyper-local news, writing briefs versus longer-term reportage) and also seeing if the problems noted in the Task Force report that recommended closure can be overcome. Note that we have already done some local investigation about and learning about wiki-based journalism on Wikinews here at [[Journalism studies and Wikinews]]. We could continue that learning and refine the process, including incorporating journalism students from universities. As for tensions, Wikinews is the only sister project that must be done with a quick turn-around: if you take a long time to [[:s:|transcribe a book]], that's just how long it takes, but if you take a long time to write news, it ceases to be news entirely. Wikiversity has been a very slow-growing project that has definitely had some successes but has generally come together over a long period with most learning resources being individual passion projects (or sometimes, frankly, crankery) which would not work with collaborative news that requires more than just a single editor writing whatever he feels like.
::Please let me know any other questions/concerns and any other editors feel free to give your own perspective. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:13, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:ZI Jony@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Non-Technical_Village_Pumps_distribution_list&oldid=29941252 -->
:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
*:{{support}}, hope to seeing ideas about this, and thank you @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 11:08, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
:Definitely worthy of discussion, so I have no problem with the proposal in the sitenotice.
:Initial questions:
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
:* What are "active editions"?
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:52, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
::*No, not at this time.
:* What are "active editions"?
::*There were 30 other active editions of Wikinews in addition to English (e.g. [[:n:es:]]) at the time of universal closure (2026-05-04).
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
::*One of the biggest issues was the problems with DPL, which is now irrelevant. Another was the lack of activity, which can be ameliorated by having it be part of an existing project instead of its own domain (e.g. some editions of Wikipedia host their own Wikinews already and those projects were not impacted by the closure).
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
::*Not at this juncture. I would also propose as far as implemention goes that we would request a new namespace and that the material be more-or-less sequestered into its own ongoing project, like Wikijournal is or like the Cookbook and Wikijunior are at our sister [[:b:]].
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
::*The process of citizen journalists practicing their craft in real-time and collaborating with others to do so is itself an education activity. We would essentially be hosting a real-time experiment in citizen journalism, online communities, and collaborative learning in addition to the prospect of spreading educational information from someone actually reading the news. I would propose that we could also make a more deliberate attempt to engage with learning <em>about</em> what does and doesn't work with collaborative news writing by experimentation (e.g. audio news, syndicating to other sites, incorporating freely-licensed news from other sources, writing hyper-local news, writing briefs versus longer-term reportage) and also seeing if the problems noted in the Task Force report that recommended closure can be overcome. Note that we have already done some local investigation about and learning about wiki-based journalism on Wikinews here at [[Journalism studies and Wikinews]]. We could continue that learning and refine the process, including incorporating journalism students from universities. As for tensions, Wikinews is the only sister project that must be done with a quick turn-around: if you take a long time to [[:s:|transcribe a book]], that's just how long it takes, but if you take a long time to write news, it ceases to be news entirely. Wikiversity has been a very slow-growing project that has definitely had some successes but has generally come together over a long period with most learning resources being individual passion projects (or sometimes, frankly, crankery) which would not work with collaborative news that requires more than just a single editor writing whatever he feels like.
::Please let me know any other questions/concerns and any other editors feel free to give your own perspective. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:13, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:::Thanks, Justin — it is food for thought.
:::In attempting to understand how we've arrived here, I've summarised some of the background on this page: [[Wikinews]].
:::Perhaps it could be helpful to flesh out more of the vision / ideas / possibilities / challenges on that page? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:49, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Inactivity policy for Curators ==
I was wondering if there is a specific inactivity polity for curators (semi-admins) as I am pretty sure the global policy does not apply to them as they are not ''fully'' sysops. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:20, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Unfortunately, I don't see an inactivity policy, but if we were to create such a new policy for curators, it should be the same for custodians (administrators). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:45, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] There is currently none, that I could find, for custodians either. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:47, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I think we should propose a local inactivity policy for custodians (and by extension, curators), which should be at least one year without any edits ''and'' logged actions. However, I don't know which page should it be when the inactivity removal procedure starts. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] In theory, there should be a section added at [[WV:Candidates for custodianship]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
::::: To be consistent with the [[meta:Admin activity review|global period of 2 years inactivity]] for en.wv [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship#How are bureaucrats removed?|Bureaucrats]] we could add something like this to [[Wikiversity:Curators]]:
::::::The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). After that time a custodian will remove the rights.
::::: -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:51, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
:::::Yup, I agree with Jtneill, there is a policy proposal for Wikiversity:Curators, where it should be logically deployed. The question is if we are ready to aprove the policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:43, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: I agree, but we should notify the colloquium about inactive curators, just like a steward would do for inactive custodians and bureaucrats per [[:m:Admin activity review|AAR]]. What is the minimum timeframe an inactive curator should receive so they can respond they would keep their rights? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:49, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:I incorporated these suggestions into the proposed curators policy. Please review/comment/improve. Summary: 2 years, notify curator's user page, then remove rights after 1 month: [[Wikiversity:Curators#Inactivity]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I created [[Template:Inactive curator]] for this. Feel free to make any changes or improvements. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Wondering, should we also have:
:::* {{tl|Inactive custodian}}
:::* {{tl|Inactive bureaucrat}}
:::or perhaps just a single template with a parameter(s) for the user right(s)/role(s)? e.g.,
:::* if a custodian is inactive for 2 years, then custodian and curator rights are to be removed and
:::* if a bureaucrat is inactive for 2 years, then bureaucrat, custodian, and curator rights are to to be removed.
:::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I would probably modify that template when we actually develop our own inactivity policy, because we're currently under the AAR (a steward notifies the colloquium with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to communities]], and inactive advanced right holders with [[m:Admin activity review/Notice to inactive right holders]]). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to become an official policy ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is consensus, alongside comments, for [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] to be implemented as an official policy. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)}}
With the introduction of AI-material, and some material just plain disruptive, its imperative that Wikiversity catches up with its sister projects and implements an official AI policy that we can work with. The recent issue of [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]]'s 50+ articles that contain significantly large AI-generated material has made me came to the Colloquium. This user has also been removing the [[Template:AI-generated]] template from their pages, calling it "misleading", "alarmist", and "pejorative" - which is all just simply nonsensical rationales. Not to even mention this user's contributions to the English Wikipedia have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Inner_Development_Goals contested] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Multipolar_trap removed] a couple of times (for being low-quality and clearly LLM-generated), highlighting the need for an actual policy to be implemented here on Wikiversity. I would like to ping {{ping|Juandev}} and {{ping|Jtneill}} for their thoughts as well, since I'd like this to be implemented as soon as possible.
Wikiversity has a significant issue with implementing anti-disruptive measures, hence why we have received numerous complaints as a community about our quality. I originally was reverting the removal of the templates, but realized that this is still a proposed policy, which it shouldn't be anymore. It should be a recognized Wikiversity policy. 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:54, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] '''I agree''' that the draft, should become official policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:00, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:I provided a detailed response at: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI]]
:I will appreaciate it if you consder that carefully. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 22:49, 10 March 2026 (UTC)
:Agree it should become official Wikiversity policy on the condition <u>that point point 5 is about [significant/substantial] LLM-generated text specifically</u>. Not a good idea to overuse it, it should be added when there is substantial AI-generated text on the page, not for other cases. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
:What policy is being debated? Is it the text on this page, which is pointed to by the general banner, or the text at: [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence|Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence,]] which is pointed to by the specific banner? Let's begin with coherence on the text being debated. Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:49, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] This is a call for approval of the new Wikiversity policy. You expressed your opinion [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence#Evolving a Wikiversity policy on AI|on the talk page of the proposal]], I replied to you and await your response.When creating policies, it is necessary to propose specific solutions. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:12, 17 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Toward a Justified and Parsimonious AI Policy
:::As we collaborate to develop a consensus policy on the use of Large Language Models, it is wise to begin by considering the needs of the various stakeholders to the policy.
:::The stakeholders are:
:::1) The users,
:::2) The source providers, and
:::3) The editors
:::There may also be others with a minor stake in this policy, including the population at large.
:::The many needs of the users are currently addressed by long-standing [[Wikiversity:Policies|Wikiversity policies]], so we can focus on what, if any, additional needs arise as LLMs are deployed.
:::As always, users need assurance that propositional statements are accurate. This is covered by the existing policy on [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verifiably]]. In addition, it is expected by both the users and those that provide materials used as sources for the text are [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|accurately attributed]]. This is also covered by [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|existing policies]].
:::To respect the time and effort of editors, a parsimonious policy will unburden editors from costly requirements that exceed benefits to the users.
:::Finally, it is important to recognize that because attention is our most valuable seizing attention unnecessarily is a form of theft.
:::The following proposed policy statement results from these considerations:
:::Recommended Policy statement:
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Verifiability|verify the accuracy]] of propositional statements, regardless of the source.
:::· Editors [[Wikiversity:Cite sources|attribute the source]] of propositional statements. In the case of LLM, cite the LLM model and the prompt used.
:::· Use of various available templates to mark the use of LLM are optional. Templates that are flexible in noting the type and extend of LLM usage are preferred. Templates that avoid unduly distracting or alarming the user are preferred. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:56, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::::Do we discuss here or there? I have replied you there as your proposal is about that policy so it is tradition to discuss it at the affected talk page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:59, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{support}} Thanks for the proposed policy development and discussion; also note proposed policy talk page discussion: [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:05, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
::I think the Wikiversity AI policy shall be official. – [[User:RestoreAccess111|RestoreAccess111]] <sup style="font-family:Arimo, Arial;">[[User talk:RestoreAccess111|Talk!]]</sup> <sup style="font-family:Times New Roman, Tinos;">[[Special:Contributions/RestoreAccess111|Watch!]]</sup> 06:11, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
I would like to propose the following retitles should a user be nominated for any of the following user rights:
* Curator: Candidates for Curatorship
* Bureaucrat: Candidates for Bureaucratship
The reason is that many curator (and probably bureaucrat) requests have run solely under {{tq|Candidates for Custodianship}}, but that title might sound misleading (especially in regards to the permission a user is requesting). CheckUser and Oversight (suppressor) are not included above since no user was nominated for these sensitive permissions, probably. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 01:30, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
:And it's not that when someone at the beginning misplaced the request, no one thought to move it and the others copied it. Even today, it would be possible to simply take it all and move it. Otherwise, for me, the more fundamental problem is that there is [[Wikiversity:Curators|no approved policy for curators]] than where the requests are based. Curators then operate in a certain vacuum and if one of them "breaks out of the chain", the average user doesn't have many transparent tools to deal with it, because there is no policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:02, 19 March 2026 (UTC)
::I am not talking about the curator page (policy proposal). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:08, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] I'll see if I can do an overhaul of [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]], just like I recently did with the Requests for adminship page on English Wikiquote. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:17, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, great idea - ideally there will be separate "Candidates for ..." pages for each user right group. The most important for now is to separate curator and custodian pages as CN suggests. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:39, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:So maybe I previously misunderstood. Are you proposing separated pages for nominations (i.e. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]], [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]])? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:30, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Yes. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:33, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I see, then I am fine with that @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Sorry for misunderstanding. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
I've split the user rights nomination pages into:
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for CheckUser]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]
Please review. There are likely several links to update, text to adjust, categories to manage, short-cuts to fix etc. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:22, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks, great job @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. I am wondering if we need to move archived nominations too, or if we are OK with the actual state. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:08, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that would be helpful. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:46, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I can do it @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I am just looking what system is there. I can see [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] which is a good complementary overview to the subpages with full history. The name of the pages is probably stably, but I would consider to create more specific redirect like [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Overview of staff nominations]], which would link to the above one. Then there is a [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]], which are probably incomplete nominations, right? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Tx @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Yes, this makes sense. And maybe we move:
::::* archived '''curator''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Archive of nominations]]
::::* archived '''bureaucrat''' nominations from [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship ]] to e.g., [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Archive of nominations]]
::::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::OK. That sounds good. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:25, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:An svg icon for [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] would also be helpful. We have them for other user rights: [[c:Category:Wikiversity user rights icons]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:54, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done: [[Wikiversity:Curators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:44, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Technical Request: Courtesy link.. ==
[[Template_talk:Information#Background_must_have_color_defined_as_well]] [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I can't edit the template directly as it need an sysop/interface admin to do it. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:: Also if the Template field of - https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:LintErrors/night-mode-unaware-background-color is examined, there is poential for an admin to clear a substantial proportion of these by implmenting a simmilar fix to the indciated templates (and underlying stylesheets). It would be nice to clear things like Project box and others, as many other templates (and thus pages depend on them.) :)
[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 11:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
:I think it would be best to grant you interface admin rights for a short period of time to make these changes. However, I still have doubts about the suitability of this solution, which may cause other problems and no one has explained to me why dark mode has to be implemented this way @[[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:43, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
: I would have reservations about holding such rights, which is why I was trying to do what I could without needing them. However if it is the only way to get the required changes made, I would suggest asking on Wikipedia to find technical editors, willing to undertake the changes needed. [[User:ShakespeareFan00|ShakespeareFan00]] ([[User talk:ShakespeareFan00|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ShakespeareFan00|contribs]]) 09:32, 21 March 2026 (UTC)
== WikiEducator has closed ==
Some of you may know of a similar project to Wikiversity, called [https://wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator], championed by [https://oerfoundation.org/about/staff/wayne-mackintosh/ Wayne Mackintosh][https://www.linkedin.com/posts/waynemackintosh_important-notice-about-the-oer-foundation-activity-7405113051688931329-Nhm9/][https://openeducation.nz/killed-not-starved/].
It seems [https://openeducation.nz/terminating-oer-foundation their foundation has closed] and they are no longer operating.
They had done quite a bit of outreach (e.g., in the Pacific and Africa) to get educators using wiki.
The WikiEducator content is still available in MediaWiki - and potentially could be imported to Wikiversity ([https://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Copyrights CC-BY-SA] is the default license).
The closing of WikiEducator arguably makes the nurturing of Wikiversity even more important.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:09, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:I was never active there. If anyone has an account or is otherwise in contact, we may want to copy relevant information here or even at [[:outreach:]]. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:46, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I reached out to [[User:Mackiwg~enwikiversity|Wayne]] in January, and he responded briefly but positively (while travelling). I wrote to the low-traffic wikieducator mailing list today and got a nice [https://groups.google.com/g/wikieducator/c/r_yIyUw6ZIA reply] from [[user:SteveFoerster|Steve Foerster]] who's interested in helping. If we can figure out a migration path it would be great to adopt at least the main namespace pages here.
:: A few questions that come to mind:
:: - would people want to create matching user accounts
:: - are there any namespaces (user/talk?) that should not be moved over
:: We could look at how this was done for the [[m:Wikivoyage/Migration]] wikivoyage migration. <span style="padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–[[User:Sj|SJ]][[User Talk:Sj|<span style="color:#ff9900;">+</span>]]</span> 04:27, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:::That's fantastic, SJ, that you've reached out and that Wayne, Steve, and Jim are receptive—and that you can help! -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews is ending ==
Apparently mainly due to low editorial activity, low public interest, but also failure to achieve the goals from the proposal for the creation of the project, the Wikinews project is ending after years of discussions ([[Meta:Proposal for Closing Wikinews|some reading]]).
And I would be interested to see how Wikiversity is doing in the monitored metrics. We probably have more editors than Wikinews had, but what about consumers and achieving the goals? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 19:14, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Wikiversity's biggest issue in recent times was the hosting of low-quality, trash content. Thankfully we've done a great job in removing pseudoscience and other embarrassingly trash content (Wikidebates, for example), but the biggest concern moving forward is proper maintenance IMO. I've caught several pseudoscience pages being created within the last few months that could easily have flown under the radar (ex, [[The Kelemen Dilemma: Causal Collapse and Axiomatic Instability]]), so I'd urge our custodians/curators to be on the lookout for this type of content. Usually an AI-overview can point this type of content out relatively well.
:In terms of visibility, I believe Wikiversity is a high-traffic project. I remember my [[Mathematical Properties]] showing up on the first page of Google when searching up "math properties" for the longest time (and is still showing up in the first page 'till this day!). Besides, Wikinews hosted a lot of short-term content (the nature of news articles), while Wikiversity hosts content that can still be useful a decade later (ex, [[A Reader's Guide to Annotation]]).
:I think we are on a better path than we were a few months ago, and I do want to thank everyone here who has been helping out with maintaining our website! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:48, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:For what it's worth, the group that did that study has since disbanded, so no one is monitoring the other sister projects in the same way. Additionally, Wikinews had some catastrophic server issues due to the maintenance of [[:m:Extension:DynamicPageList]] which don't apply here. Your questions are still worth addressing, but I just wanted to cut off any concern at the pass about Wikiversity being in the same precarious situation. Wikiversity is definitely the biggest "lagging behind" or "failure" project now that Wikinews is being shuttered, but I don't see any near- or medium-term pathway to closing Wikiversity. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:46, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:[[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2026-03-31/News and notes|Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down]] (Wikipedia Signpost) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:03, 11 April 2026 (UTC)
== Action Required: Update templates/modules for electoral maps (Migrating from P1846 to P14226) ==
Hello everyone,
This is a notice regarding an ongoing data migration on Wikidata that may affect your election-related templates and Lua modules (such as <code>Module:Itemgroup/list</code>).
'''The Change:'''<br />
Currently, many templates pull electoral maps from Wikidata using the property [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]], combined with the qualifier [[:d:Property:P180|P180]]: [[:d:Q19571328|Q19571328]].
We are migrating this data (across roughly 4,000 items) to a newly created, dedicated property: '''[[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]]'''.
'''What You Need To Do:'''<br />
To ensure your templates and infoboxes do not break or lose their maps, please update your local code to fetch data from [[:d:Property:P14226|P14226]] instead of the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] + [[:d:Property:P180|P180]] structure. A [[m:Wikidata/Property Migration: P1846 to P14226/List|list of pages]] was generated using Wikimedia Global Search.
'''Deadline:'''<br />
We are temporarily retaining the old data on [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] to allow for a smooth transition. However, to complete the data cleanup on Wikidata, the old [[:d:Property:P1846|P1846]] statements will be removed after '''May 1, 2026'''. Please update your modules and templates before this date to prevent any disruption to your wiki's election articles.
Let us know if you have any questions or need assistance with the query logic. Thank you for your help! [[User:ZI Jony|ZI Jony]] using [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 17:11, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
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:I didnt find such properties, so we are probably fine. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 21:00, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
:: +1 (agreed). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:19, 12 April 2026 (UTC)
== Enable the abuse filter block action? ==
In light of [[Special:AbuseLog/80178]] (coupon spam), I would like to propose enabling the block action for the abuse filter. Only custodians will be able to enable and disable that action on an abuse filter, and it is useful to block ongoing vandalism. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:12, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a good idea, almost all of the users which create such pages are spambots so this shouldn’t be a problem. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:41, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:Can you explain some more (I am new to abuse filters)? It looks like the attempted edit was prevented? Which abuse filter?
:Note on your suggestion, have also reactivated Antispam Filter 12 - see [[WV:RCA]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:45, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I am proposing that we activate the abuse filter block action, which if a user triggers an abuse filter, it would actually block the user in question - the same mechanism that a custodian would use to block users. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:11, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::OK, thankyou, that makes sense. And, reviewing the abuse filter 12 log, it would be helpful because it would prevent the need for manual blocking. But I don't see a setting for autoblocking? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:14, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
:::: I think it probably adds an autoblock. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:43, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
: [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] and [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], given that a little bit more than a week has passed and there is minimal consensus to activate the abuse filter block action, I filed [[phab:T424053]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank-you for doing this. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:03, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
== Advice needed: A Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/observation ==
If I want the greatest participation of others to "provide constructive criticism to my idea" or to "shoot down my idea" or "idea".
What I've called it so far is "The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea". At other times I used more sensationalist wording but here on Wikiversity I don't dare do that. I actually woke up with thinking about putting this into my userspace draft: "Personal Observations Made By Meeting Autistic and Non-Autistic Adults".
My ultimate goal is to stop blathering about my "idea" to friend and family without feeling my "methodology" is going into any progressive direction whatsoever. My latest encounter was somewhat constructive though. A friend of a friend who worked with people presenting ideas in attempting to getting grants. I don't want a grant. I just want to figure out how I can express my "idea" in a way so that I can more clearly figure out what flaws it got.
At the same time I tend to overthink. If anyone thinks etherpad might be a good place and considering Wikimedia already got an etherpad at https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/ if anyone feels like they know me better in the future feel free to suggest a "session" on etherpad.
'''If I don't receive a reply to this in 1 week's time I will begin to explore this "idea" into my userspace''' unless you replied and refrained me from doing so, of course. Then maybe after "developing it there" I might reference it to you another future time here in the Colloquium, with my "idea" still in my userspace draft. This "idea" is sort of a burden, I'm happy I've made the choice to get rid of it and hopefully move on with my life, unless there is something to this "idea".
My failure is probably evident: I feel I haven't told you anything. Same happened to when I talked to friends and family. In danger of overthinking it further I'll publish this right now. I need to "keep it together" [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:36, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
:Good on you putting it out there ... and hitting publish :). I'd say go for it (no need to wait), give birth to your idea and share about it here and elsewhere. Let it take shape and see where it might go. In many ways, this is exactly what an open collaborative learning community should be doing. Others might not know well how to respond, so perhaps consider creating some questions to accompany the idea. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:21, 16 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for encouraging me in developing the idea.
::I have created a "questions" section in the draft which is visible in the table of contents now. My brain was "frozen" today metaphorically speaking in that I felt I had like a "writer's block" so the draft has more "AI/LLM" content than before. I used the LLM for generating questions. The answers are so far human-only.
::I've also created a subsection where I could add the prompts that made the LLM generate the questions. That could help people make better prompts perhaps. I've described what it is about inside of it and there are some chaotically written notes.
::[[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea#Questions_that_might_encourage_the_development_of_this_idea_and_its_methodology]]
::My draft is missing stuff. Any questions that you contribute to my draft will probably help me and if I don't understand the questions I'll probably notify you and also at the same time "feed them" to an LLM and ask in my input like "explain in simple words what this question means, what is it searching for?" etc. while I wait for an answer. If you have any more feedback please give it to me here or on the Draft page, its talk page or my user talk page. Thank you for helping me! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 21:20, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::Today I woke up with not only thinking about supplying questions along with the "idea" but also answers. ie. Is it possible to "test" this idea? Is it possible to create one or multiple hypotheses based on this "idea"?(etc.) I've thought about this before in this "idea" but since I'm beginning to add to Wikiversity what was previously 'locked in my mind' it's also easier for me to see what I've done so far. Thank you for this comment! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 09:11, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish. Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet. Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible. Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents. -- [[User:Eric.LEWIN|Eric.LEWIN]] ([[User talk:Eric.LEWIN|discussion]] • [[Special:Contributions/Eric.LEWIN|contributions]]) 10:06, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sorry about the false positive on the profanity filter - I've fixed it. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:26, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::"May I think that you should not add deadlines ; being read, and rising interest for collaboration, or even simply for exchange of thoughts, such an effective meeting event loads a huge bunch of unprobability, which time can help to… somehow diminish."
::Thank you Eric for this comment. Trust in time is how I interpret it. I should not feel like I need to be in a hurry. I'll try to give this time. Thank you!
:::"Maybe, I would advice you having a central place for developping your ideas, your needs, your advances, maybe a page in your own user zone, and from time to time, depending your feeling, it could be every trimester or so, or more frequently, you could write a short account of progress (or even of no progress), or a call for participation, in such a place as this present one ; I think that will increase much exposure of your projet."
::A central place for developing or making "project notes" regarding the Neurodiversity idea on my userspace, I might need that, like a diary or "project notes" of the Neurodiversity idea similar to my course notes regarding my experience with Coursera.
::Any actions I take are going to be related to my Userspace from now on but I'll also update the draft when necessary. Now in the beginning I might be working daily to once every 3 days on both the draft and the daily notes I plan to make.
:::"Maybe also, if you can find a project name, not necessarily very meaningfull by itseilf (at least it will gain signification with time, as your project develops), that will serve as a kind-of hook, and make your announcement titles more visible."
::Thank you for the advice. I was brainstorming yesterday about it. I concluded that since I've not yet developed a methodology that adheres to "Do no harm" and this is my first time working my "idea" into a way that is compatible with how projects develop on English Wikiversity this is new to me. My methodology isn't developed and therefore trying to get attention to my project through a name can wait. Yesterday I figured out a silly title that has nothing to do with the project: "Planetary Awareness Potato Cabbage Rolls" or something like that. Google output read that no such thing exists so I wanted it mainly to be unique. I don't want to raise attention that I'm unsure whether I'll actually be capable of developing a methodology for but project notes is my best bet so far in tracking my progress. Every day I think about this "idea" but I need to improve the important parts.
:::"Best regards (and my excuses for my poor command of English, which seems to be unplease an anti-abuse filter, "Questionable Language (profanity)", which I don't understand…). My few cents."
::You added great points and I felt that I was helped by you! I encourage you to post again and I can understand that interacting with any kind of automated filter can be discouraging and can be for me too! Thank you for giving me feedback! [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 16:01, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
== Add some user rights to the curator user group? ==
By default, only custodians have the ability to mark new pages as patrolled (<code>patrol</code>) and have their own page creations automatically marked as patrolled (<code>autopatrol</code>). I am proposing both of the following:
* Curators can mark new pages as patrolled, helping on reducing the backlog of new, unpatrolled pages.
* New pages made by curators will be automatically marked as patrolled by the MediaWiki software.
Before we implement this, I would suggest implementing a proposed guideline for marking new pages as patrolled for curators and custodians.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:32, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:Agree, <s>also can we also allow curators to undelete pages since they already have the rights to delete them?</s> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::I think the requirement that undelete NOT be included came from above (meta / stewards / central office). Having access to the undelete page gives access to information that is restricted by their policies to admins (custodians and bureaucrats). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:12, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::: [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]], unless if requests for curator and custodian should be RfA-like processes (that is, including voting and comments), then I have to agree with Dave above. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:03, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Oh, I didn’t realise that. Withdrawing my comment.. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:08, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} Seems reasonable and would reduce overhead. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:'''Agree''', implement it also to [[Wikiversity:Curators]] proposal please. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:11, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: I went ahead and filed [[phab:T424445]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:39, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators and curators policy]] ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:15, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
How does it come, that Wikiversity has curators, but Curators policy is still being proposed? How do the curators exists and act if the policy about them havent been approved yet? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:33, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:It looks as if it is not just curators. The policy on Bureaucratship is still being proposed as well. See [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. —[[User:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="font-family:Verdana; color:#008000; text-shadow:gray 0.2em 0.2em 0.4em;">RailwayEnthusiast2025</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:RailwayEnthusiast2025|<span style="color:#59a53f">''talk with me!''</span>]]</sup> 18:33, 27 October 2025 (UTC)
:I think its just the nature of a small WMF sister project in that there are lots of drafts, gaps, and potential improvements. In this case, these community would need to vote on those proposed Wikiversity staff policies if we think they're ready. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:08, 3 December 2025 (UTC)
:What? I thought you were getting it approved, Juandev... :) [[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]] ([[User talk:I'm Mr. Chris|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/I'm Mr. Chris|contribs]]) 14:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
::Yeah I think this one is important too and we need to aprove it too @[[User:I'm Mr. Chris|I'm Mr. Chris]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:56, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:::I thinks its ready to made into a policy, it seems to be complete and informative about what the rights does and how to get it. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 03:08, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Agree -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:00, 27 March 2026 (UTC)
Let's make this the official discussion about adopting the [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators policy]] policy. Your comments are invited and welcome. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:40, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
: There were two similar Colloquium threads in separate places about the proposed curators policy. So I've moved them to be adjacent. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== Wikiversity:Curators to become a policy ==
{{archive top|There is strong consensus, so [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is now a policy. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:16, 9 May 2026 (UTC)}}
I've looked at the discussions about the Curators policy, I've looked at the practices, and it seems to me that there is no dispute about the wording of the policy, and what's more, the community has been using this proposal as if it were an offical policy for several years. Therefore, I propose that [[Wikiversity:Curators]] become a policy. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:35, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:54, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 20:21, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
: {{support|Yes, please}}. Especially after when I and PieWriter proposed above, I agree. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:27, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Juandev|Juandev]]; as of now, curators now have the user rights <code>autopatrol</code> and <code>patrol</code>. Perhaps we should also include that in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:07, 30 April 2026 (UTC)
:::You meant [[Wikiversity:Curators]] @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::: I agree that we must develop what rules curators should follow when marking new pages as patrolled; the same can be added for custodians since they can also mark new pages as patrolled. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:37, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::I see, well I think you can just add this to the policy. It is not major change and it probably reflects actual practice or actual technical possibilities for those flags. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:20, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:42, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Support}} per nom. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 13:32, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}
== Inactive curators ==
Hello, even though [[Wikiversity:Curators]] is not a policy yet, there are curators listed here that have been inactive for two years or more:
* {{user|Cody naccarato}} (last edit on 13 Dec 2022, last logged action on 10 Dec 2022)
* {{user|Praxidicae}} (last edit on 10 Sep 2022, last logged action on 12 Sep 2022)
[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:14, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yup, I would remove the rights. To get the rights back if theyll come back should not be a big deal. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:08, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:: When they don't reply by May 19, feel free (or any custodian) to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:28, 25 April 2026 (UTC)
== Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? ==
Is anyone interested in Neurodiversity? Is there anyone here who is interested for Neurodiversity to be "something more" than it already is? Does anyone here consider Neurodiversity one of the "harder topics" to work on or discuss? Does anyone here have an opinion about the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]? So these questions don't appear like "out of a vacuum" I can tell you a bit about my background:
Many years ago I got a psychiatric diagnosis "Asperger's". After I stepped out of the office and my Äsperger's was 'concluded', I stepped out into the street and thought my first negative thought(but the positive thought followed after). The thought was about concentration camps in the second world war and that the world seemed to be going into the direction of "labeling others". I was unsure whether this was "real science" and sort of "challenged myself" to make up my own mind after meeting people that had been given this diagnosis. The more adults with this diagnosis I met the more I started seeing "patterns".
Was it a coincidence that the first person with Asperger's I met reminded me about my father later after I had plenty of times of experience with interacting with him? None of the people I interacted with online through IRC text chat...I felt I got any clue about how "their brains work". Only when I met one person from the Asperger's chat community in person we both realized that whatever we experienced was akin to the "chaos theory". He told me about "chaos theory" while I didn't know even what that term meant but I guess I 'read between the lines'. My question that I linger on still today is "did he understand about me what I think I understood about him?"? That our brains had the same configuration? Most autistic adults who meet other autistic adults usually get disappointed. They think the diagnosis will help them meet somebody like themselves and then they realize the great diversity in the autistic spectrum created by Psychiatry.
I later stopped interacting with autistic communities that much, I felt that it did not benefit me. Also Neurodiversity's "neurotypes" interested me for a while until I realized I had "misunderstood everything" about them and how they are used in the Neurodiversity Movement or "Neurodiversity community" if that even can precisely be defined? I doubt it but if you want to contribute to the [[Neurodiversity Movement]]. My previous attempts failed as I got more and more confused. I think a community project needs a community. With a lack of that I don't think it is worth my time. If any of you would like to work on that project let me know on my talk page.
So I was kinda lost and was talking to my friend and psychologist and I realized if I never talk about my idea to anyone in a "comprehensive way" or show that it matters to me nothing is going to ever happen. So I started talking about my "idea" more. Nobody could understand the "idea" because I had not developed my skills regarding where to start...although the process had already started "automatically" and that's why I often think of "well my brain sort of activated me". I don't feel like I did have a plan and this idea happened. It happened "by itself". My brain reacted to what I was seeing in a video or stream.
I value interaction highly in this idea. I think it would be helpful to make a community of people who are not paranoid about stuff that can express itself like "don't analyze me!", "don't compare me to anyone!".
On the contrary, more often than not those adults who were diagnosed were actually openly comparing themselves with each other and I think that is healthy in a "science" way if done the "right way" which probably means "Do no harm".
I found video material is important but I'm very unsure if uploading own video material to Wikimedia Commons would constitute a "reasonable" use of the resources there. Maybe somebody here needs to ask more questions to me that I should answer before that happens. I also know the '''be bold''' so I could just do what I think might be ok. Though I work better in a group as long as I know what "group configurations" help me. This is in a non-profit way. Since the state supported me this might be a way I am trying to "give back" to the state and "the world". May seem overly ambitious and crazy but this thing gives me energy. It gives me hope when trying to develop this idea. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:47, 23 April 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks for sharing. There is plenty of room for neurodiversity community learning. However, the challenge I think is that the intersection of those interested in (a) ND, and (b) English Wikiversity might be very small (e.g., 1!) at this point in time.
:But don't give up hope. For example, Wikipedia has many more ND-interested editors; maybe consider reaching out to see who might be interested:
:[[w:Category:Wikipedians interested in neurodiversity]]
:You could also start an equivalent category here:
:[[:Category:Wikiversitarians interested in neurodiversity]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:46, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Request for comment (global AI policy) ==
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">A [[:m:Requests for comment/Artificial intelligence policy|request for comment]] is currently being held to decide on a global AI policy. {{int:Feedback-thanks-title}} [[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]] ([[User talk:MediaWiki message delivery|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MediaWiki message delivery|contribs]]) 00:58, 26 April 2026 (UTC)</bdi>
<!-- Message sent by User:Codename Noreste@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Distribution_list/Global_message_delivery&oldid=30424282 -->
== Language learning ==
toki! I am trying to add or see what the toki pona language learning stuff on here is but I don't see anything that is language learning for anything. [[User:Jan Imon|Jan Imon]] ([[User talk:Jan Imon|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Jan Imon|contribs]]) 23:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC) —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:29, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:We have language materials ([[:Category:Languages]], [[World Languages]], [[Portal:Foreign Language Learning]], [[Portal:Multilingual Studies]]). They are not as developed as I think we would all like and there's not any coverage of Toki Pona, but in principle, we could and would like that. You can also see [[:b:Subject:Languages]] at our sister project Wikibooks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:33, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
== Timeline format? ==
I’ve been working on the World War II articles, including the [[World War II/Timeline|timeline]], and is there a specific timeline format that should be used? Right now it’s just a table, and there’s no separation between different periods/phases of the war.
I don’t want to use [[mw:Extension:EasyTimeline]] because this will be displaying dates and not time periods. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 01:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
:I dont think we have a policy or guideline, how to format a timeline. But you may try to browes wikiversity by Google if someone was dealing with this in the past somewhow @[[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:23, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::+1 - there's no specific guideline on how to format a timeline, it's really up to you. In my opinion I think the timeline is good. I'd personally bold the dates just to make it easier to separate it from the event description, but that's my personal 2 cents. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:18, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I’ll probably remove links to the dates/years, they’re just Wikipedia pages that shouldn’t be over linked to. [[User:PhilDaBirdMan|PhilDaBirdMan]] ([[User talk:PhilDaBirdMan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PhilDaBirdMan|contribs]]) 00:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
== Interface administrator for Codename Noreste ==
{{Archive top|After running for a week, there is clear consensus for [[User:Codename Noreste]] to have Interface admin rights for 120 days; implemented until 10 September, 2026 -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:36, 12 May 2026 (UTC)}}
Hello, everyone. I am requesting interface administrator access on this wiki.
The main reasoning is that I would benefit from having the user right <code>editinterface</code>, which would allow me to make dark mode changes to pages in the MediaWiki namespace, add <code><nowiki><div class="mw-parser-output"></nowiki></code> to some interface pages using templates, handle interface-protected edit requests, and similar stuff. Additionally, I have some knowledge of CSS, and I would like to assist with modifying CSS pages whenever necessary, such as moving MediaWiki common.css code to TemplateStyles CSS pages.
I am requesting the maximum time that is allowed per the [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|policy]], and I have 2FA enabled on my account. Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trusted user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:07, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Trusted and knowledgeable. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:35, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} WV would benefit from this. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 08:32, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:13, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{Comment}} Could @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]], which was requested to be deleted @[[User:Koavf|Justin]], @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]]? I dont think we need it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:40, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes - clearly no longer used -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:18, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I can't delete it because I don't have the required permissions to do so.
::: On a side note, if this project has a need for permanent interface administrators, I would suggest that we have a minimum of two IAs, similar to how there must be two CUs and/or suppressors (or none). Maybe Koavf can be a good candidate if I am elected for permanent interface adminship, and I believe that permission shouldn't be removed from someone's own account. Instead, a bureaucrat should do it. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:20, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::I am willing and happy to do it, unfortunately, we do not have an appetite for indef IAs and just had a discussion that resulted in a [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Interface_administrators&diff=prev&oldid=2807543 consensus that we can have IAs that have the user rights for 14 to 120 days]. So once you have the rights, please make sure to gopher it. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 17:54, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] give it time. Look at me, I was in favor of shorter time, now I am looking back to times, when custodians could do it without the need of extra flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:31, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::Here's hoping. I think it would reduce administrative overhead, but that's just me and I'm not a bureaucrat here. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:33, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Complicated. Where are the times, admins could do everything! [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:27, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
== [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] to become a policy ==
Following the recent approval of [[Wikiversity:Curators]] as a policy, I think [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] may also be ready for policy status.
Please share your views about whether bureaucratship is ready to become a policy, or whether further revisions are needed.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 13:58, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I added a logo about that user group, but other than that, it looks good to me. {{support}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:38, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:I think that the consensus on this policy is proven by years of using it without further changes. But I I have to say weather I agree with this to become a policy, than of course {{support}}. It works and there were no major issues with it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:45, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} no issues. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:51, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{support}} ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:51, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Reminder about custodian-related pages ==
I would like to remind the community about what the following custodian pages are:
* [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] is for requesting actions to be done by custodians, and
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]] is for notices of interest to custodians, like an administrator's noticeboard
Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:12, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thanks - I needed this reminder :) -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== [[MediaWiki:Protectedpagetext#Protected edit request on 11 December 2025]] ==
I posted an edit request there 5 months ago, so I’ll be taking it to this page. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28640-56|~2026-28640-56]] ([[User talk:~2026-28640-56|talk]]) 23:33, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:What exactly is the problem? I don't understand what needs to change and why. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:35, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:: Someone wanted to discuss about using the protected page text template. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:40, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Create a pseudo-bot user group? ==
I would like to propose adding a new user group to Wikiversity: Pseudo-bot (<code>flood</code>). This will allow users to perform repetitive actions without flushing the recent changes feed (with only the <code>bot</code> user right). However, I would suggest that for the pseudo-bot user group:
* It can be granted and revoked by custodians. However, can curators add and remove pseudo-bot from their own accounts (and not others)?
* Users can remove themselves from it.
* A guideline might be necessary about the information and usage of it.
Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:31, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Coming over From wikinews ==
Any chance someone could help me if you are allowed to write news articles here since wikinews is going read only mode soon, thank you! [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
:The scope of Wikiversity is very broad and is basically about more-or-less any learning material. We have made it a point to not have duplicative content of other WMF projects, but since Wikinews is being shuttered, I personally am fine with writing news articles here. One thing that is not controversial at all is a learning resource <em>about</em> how to write news: that could be hugely useful here and could involve the process of writing news stories to learn and to share back and forth with an editor or fact-checker. In fact, I'd support an entire namespace dedicated to keeping the notion of Wikinews alive here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:38, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you so much! How do I start? Cheers! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:07, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::I think it's premature to start just making news articles en masse, but if you want to start discussing the topic of citizen journalism, you can do that now. [[:Category:Journalism]] already has some material, so you can start by seeing what we already have, how you can refine that, etc. You can definitely have learning resources with collaborators who want to learn about journalism ASAP. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:24, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:38, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::If I could try and start one News Article could you please tell me how to go about it? Like what style of writing like Wikinews or something else? Thank you Justin! @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 01:48, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::Honestly, there are very few policies and guidelines here. I think the best way to write a news story would be in a manner that is obvious and instructive. So, for instance, it's common to use the "pyramid style" when you're writing news, so if you were to write a story that makes it very clear that you are using that approach, that would be helpful. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::cool thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:13, 2 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::im ready to write @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:30, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should get more local consensus for a big project like including the entirety of the scope of Wikinews here. Again, I support it personally. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:55, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::::::::ok lets begin. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:15, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Proposal to rehost Wikinews here ==
As many of you know, and mentioned here at the Colloquium, our sister project Wikinews recently closed, with all 31 active editions made read-only. [[User:BigKrow]] has asked about the prospect of writing news stories here and I suggested that since we already have [[School:Journalism]] and some resources related to the [[:Category:Journalism|broader topic of journalism]]. I would like to propose that we have continued and indefinite space for {{w|citizen journalism}} by essentially repurposing Wikinews into a sub-project here. The only special infrastructure that Wikinews required was [[:mw:Extension:DynamicPageList]], which was deactivated and caused issues due to a lack of maintenance.
I will add this proposal to the site banner, but I recognize that that may be a conflict of interest, so if anyone requests that I remove it, I will. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:30, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:I would like to see this conversation go for at least 30 days to establish a consensus. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Votes===
*{{support}} as proposer (with BK's inspiration). I think that an ongoing experiment in citizen journalism is a fit and appropriate use of this site. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:35, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}}, hope to seeing ideas about this, and thank you @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 11:08, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
===Comments and questions===
:Definitely worthy of discussion, so I have no problem with the proposal in the sitenotice.
:Initial questions:
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
:* What are "active editions"?
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:52, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:* Does this proposal include importing English Wikinews content e.g., to [[Wikinews]] subpages?
::*No, not at this time.
:* What are "active editions"?
::*There were 30 other active editions of Wikinews in addition to English (e.g. [[:n:es:]]) at the time of universal closure (2026-05-04).
:* How can Wikiversity navigate the concerns that lead to the closure of Wikinews?
::*One of the biggest issues was the problems with DPL, which is now irrelevant. Another was the lack of activity, which can be ameliorated by having it be part of an existing project instead of its own domain (e.g. some editions of Wikipedia host their own Wikinews already and those projects were not impacted by the closure).
:* Are any changes to the scope of Wikinews proposed?
::*Not at this juncture. I would also propose as far as implemention goes that we would request a new namespace and that the material be more-or-less sequestered into its own ongoing project, like Wikijournal is or like the Cookbook and Wikijunior are at our sister [[:b:]].
:* How does [[Wikinews]] fit with the [[Wikiversity:Mission]]? What aligns well? Where might there be tension?
:** e.g., I'm not sure that a page like [[Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]] in and of itself will serve as an educational resource.
::*The process of citizen journalists practicing their craft in real-time and collaborating with others to do so is itself an education activity. We would essentially be hosting a real-time experiment in citizen journalism, online communities, and collaborative learning in addition to the prospect of spreading educational information from someone actually reading the news. I would propose that we could also make a more deliberate attempt to engage with learning <em>about</em> what does and doesn't work with collaborative news writing by experimentation (e.g. audio news, syndicating to other sites, incorporating freely-licensed news from other sources, writing hyper-local news, writing briefs versus longer-term reportage) and also seeing if the problems noted in the Task Force report that recommended closure can be overcome. Note that we have already done some local investigation about and learning about wiki-based journalism on Wikinews here at [[Journalism studies and Wikinews]]. We could continue that learning and refine the process, including incorporating journalism students from universities. As for tensions, Wikinews is the only sister project that must be done with a quick turn-around: if you take a long time to [[:s:|transcribe a book]], that's just how long it takes, but if you take a long time to write news, it ceases to be news entirely. Wikiversity has been a very slow-growing project that has definitely had some successes but has generally come together over a long period with most learning resources being individual passion projects (or sometimes, frankly, crankery) which would not work with collaborative news that requires more than just a single editor writing whatever he feels like.
::Please let me know any other questions/concerns and any other editors feel free to give your own perspective. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:13, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:::Thanks, Justin — it is food for thought.
:::In attempting to understand how we've arrived here, I've summarised some of the background on this page: [[Wikinews]].
:::Perhaps it could be helpful to flesh out more of the vision / ideas / possibilities / challenges on that page? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:49, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
0np6b87otej1r98bknrzrgzq85vbic3
MediaWiki:Sitenotice
8
1213
2809037
2808671
2026-05-14T03:09:14Z
Jtneill
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[[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] has been nominated for probationary custodianship.
2809037
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<div style="text-align: left; display: inline-block;">
<ul>
<li>Discuss the proposed [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] policy [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Wikiversity:Bureaucratship to become a policy|at the Colloquium]].</li>
<li>[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] has been nominated for bureaucratship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Atcovi|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
<li>[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] has been nominated for bureaucratship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Koavf|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
<li>[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] has been nominated for probationary custodianship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
<li>[[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] has been nominated for probationary custodianship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/PieWriter|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
</ul>
</div>
t79jdptdu04nuph48970s7jf2n3q6fq
2809094
2809037
2026-05-14T05:32:00Z
Koavf
147
2809094
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<div style="text-align: left; display: inline-block;">
<ul>
<li>Discuss the proposed [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]] policy [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Wikiversity:Bureaucratship to become a policy|at the Colloquium]].</li>
<li>[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] has been nominated for bureaucratship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Atcovi|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
<li>[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] has been nominated for bureaucratship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Koavf|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
<li>[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] has been nominated for probationary custodianship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
<li>[[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] has been nominated for probationary custodianship. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/PieWriter|Please contribute to the discussion]].</li>
<li>There is a proposal to [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Proposal_to_rehost_Wikinews_here|rehost our shuttered sister project Wikinews]] at Wikiversity.</li>
</ul>
</div>
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Wikiversity:Notices for custodians
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/* Call for custodians and bureaucrats */ Reply
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{{Shortcut|WV:NOTICE|WV:AN}}
{{/Header}}
== GRP socks ==
* {{user|170.83.119.121}}
* {{user|181.115.60.123}}
Long-term abuse: [[w:WP:LTA/GRP]]. [[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 02:13, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
:{{Done}} -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 03:26, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::Revdel request: [[Special:Contributions/154.246.203.175]] —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:44, 7 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/189.223.144.31|189.223.144.31]] ==
* {{user|189.223.144.31}}
* Report reason: Open proxy (used by [[w:WP:LTA/GRP|GRP]]), left an abusive edit summary on my talk page.
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 01:50, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
:{{Done}} -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 02:09, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3|2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3]] ==
* {{user|2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3}}
* Report reason: Edit warring on [[Types of Dinosaur]] (see [[special:diff/2521104|1]], [[special:diff/2521102|2]], [[special:diff/2521100|3]], [[special:diff/2521098|4]])
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 23:10, 16 May 2023 (UTC)
:Now blocked, thanks! -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 00:56, 17 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/I Join john|I Join john]] ==
* {{user|I Join john}}
* Report reason: spam
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 02:58, 10 June 2023 (UTC)
:Late notice, but for recording purposes: blocked by Dave Braunschweig on June 17. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:52, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
== New special page to fight spam ==
{{int:please-translate}}
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Hello,
We are replacing most of the functionalities of [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] with a new special page called [[Special:BlockedExternalDomains]]. In this special page, admins can simply add a domain and notes on the block (usually reasoning and/or link to a discussion) and the added domain would automatically be blocked to be linked in Wikis anymore (including its subdomains). Content of this list is stored in [[MediaWiki:BlockedExternalDomains.json]]. You can see [[:w:fa:Special:BlockedExternalDomains]] as an example. Check [[phab:T337431|the phabricator ticket]] for more information.
This would make fighting spam easier and safer without needing to know regex or accidentally breaking wikis while also addressing the need to have some notes next to each domain on why it’s blocked. It would also make the list of blocked domains searchable and would make editing Wikis in general faster by optimizing matching links added against the blocked list in every edit (see [[phab:T337431#8936498]] for some measurements).
If you want to migrate your entries in [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]], there is a python script in [[phab:P49299]] that would produce contents of [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] and [[MediaWiki:BlockedExternalDomains.json]] for you automatically migrating off simple regex cases.
Note that this new feature doesn’t support regex (for complex cases) nor URL paths matching. Also it doesn’t support bypass by spam whitelist. For those, please either keep using [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] or switch to an abuse filter if possible. And adding a link to the list might take up to five minutes to be fully in effect (due to server-side caching, this is already the case with the old system) and admins and bots automatically bypass the blocked list.
Let me know if you have any questions or encounter any issues. Happy editing. [[User:Ladsgroup|Amir]] ([[User talk:Ladsgroup|talk]]) 09:41, 19 June 2023 (UTC)
</div>
<!-- Message sent by User:Ladsgroup@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Ladsgroup/target_ANs&oldid=25167735 -->
==Vandal: [[User:Ceoalphonso]]==
They were spamming on Wikipedia, later claimed that their account was hacked. They were blocked for having a compromised account. They have started editing Wikiversity. High risk of future vandalism. They should be blocked for having a compromised account, in spite of the fact that this is dubious, because of AGF. [[User:Janhrach|Janhrach]] ([[User talk:Janhrach|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Janhrach|contribs]]) 07:45, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
:This user hasn't edited since February. Unless their editing picks back up and becomes problematic, there's no action necessary at this time. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 12:47, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
::{{ping|Atcovi}} They have not been active here since February, but they have made several edits across other wikis in the meantime. Their edits include highly visible vandalism, such as spamming in TemplateData. I would highly recommend a block. [[User:Janhrach|Janhrach]] ([[User talk:Janhrach|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Janhrach|contribs]]) 14:52, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
:::Since I still personally disagree, I'll leave this another custodian to take whatever action they deem reasonable. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 17:06, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
::::{{not done}} user has not edited since February 2023, so for record-keeping purposes, I'm marking this request as stale. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:59, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
== [[Special:Contributions/2600:1003:B05E:6EC6:0:33:95BF:E701]] ==
* {{user|2600:1003:B05E:6EC6:0:33:95BF:E701}}
Cross-wiki vandalism. --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 01:21, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:22, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
::Thank you, Koavf! --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 01:26, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
== Maintenance vs administration ==
Bumping a [[User_talk:Tule-hog#Wikiversity:Administration|redirect for discussion]] concerning custodianship. [[User:Tule-hog|Tule-hog]] ([[User talk:Tule-hog|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tule-hog|contribs]]) 09:50, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
== Vandalism ==
Please block [[Special:Contributions/76.121.217.240]]. --[[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 03:09, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:Not a local sysop here but {{done}}. --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 03:18, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:: {{comment}} Page deleted. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 03:21, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Hi it's me again. Please block [[Special:Contributions/216.186.51.108]] — @[[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] @[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]]. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:54, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
::::{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 19:58, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Hello. Again and again. Please block [[Special:Contributions/152.22.75.23]]. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:48, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Already done by Aramil. I think Wikiversity should take action against proxies. I suspect that these IPs are proxies and belong to the same person. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:52, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Possibly {{ping|Mu301}} has some experience dealing with proxies? —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:58, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
== Import of aiCAMstir ==
[[File:'aiCAMstir' icon, © Stephan Kallee, AluStir, CC-BY-SA 4.0.png|thumb|aiCAMstir]]
The '''aiCAMstir''' project is a non-commercial collaborative project on using Artificial Intelligence in Welding. We want to create a mirror of the www_aicamstir_com web site, before this will be taken down. We do not want to add the links to the project partners but include references to published papers. However, the software settings seems to restrict the use of web links, and recommended to get in touch with an admin (By the way, I am an [[Commons:Category:'aiCAMstir'|experienced Wikimedia user]]). Do you want to allow me, to insert weblinks into references? [[User:'aiCAMstir'|'aiCAMstir']] ([[User talk:'aiCAMstir'|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/'aiCAMstir'|contribs]]) 11:27, 1 February 2025 (UTC)
== Block of MarsSterlingTurner ==
(Deleted and reposted to [[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#Block_of_MarsSterlingTurner]]. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 04:42, 10 April 2025 (UTC))
== Edit warring by [[User:Harold Foppele]] ==
{{user|Harold Foppele}} is edit warring at [[Is LGBTQIA+ being forced on society?]] (wikidebate) to add some long AI-generated text with broken wikisyntax and insists on my talk page they don't need to address my 4 specific reasons for the removal ([[Special:Diff/2784967]]) such as the broken wikisyntax. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 14:51, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:You do not revert an editors contribution.
:You done that before, [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Prototyperspective&action=edit§ion=10| See here] I do not have to address your 4 reasons, that is where a discussion/talk page is for. What Wikidebate Is Not: Explicitly, it's not a platform to defend preferred points of view (similar to WP:NOTSOAPBOX or WP:NOTFORUM). Focus on gathering all sides neutrally, not advocacy. This is not a discussion. Removing edits that you do not like in a debat is not done [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 14:41, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:I've moved the LLM-generated text to [[Is LGBTQIA+ being forced on society?/Response from an LLM]]. The contribution breaks the wikisyntax and doesn't follow the applied format as the other arguments. Perhaps for the resource, a subpage with an input from an AI (which afaik tries its best to maintain a NPOV) could be useful. I'd advise [[User:Harold Foppele]] to provide a link to the conversation on said subpage. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 23:18, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks, I think this is solved now. Hopefully, the user will interact more constructively in the future. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 11:40, 14 January 2026 (UTC)
:::If you talk to a user before acting that would prevent problems. Beside a curator, no one is allowed to edit users contributions. Esp. in debates. Files are even stricter there. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 13:05, 14 January 2026 (UTC)
::::That is not true. I talked to you in 1. the edit summary and 2. on my talk page where you insisted "this is not a discussion" and that you don't need to address my 4 reasons. People are not free to dump anything they want onto pages and then have it stay there with reverts and removals being impossible. Contentious edits like that need consensus for inclusion or the removal reasons to be addressed. Your interaction has been very nonconstructive and hopefully this is not a wider phenomenon on the site which if so would cause massive quality problems. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 11:35, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::You did mention it in the edit while deleting it. The 'contentious' comment is still there with an expansion to a subpage. It is not you who decide what is dump or not, or what is contentious, that is what custodians are for. A simple comment with a ping at the talk page or the user page would be sufficient to start a discussion and reach consensus. If no consensus is reached, the help of a custodian can be sought. You are not the discussion leader on the subject. Wikiversity lives by AGF (Assume Good Faith). So I assume that for you as well. I admire @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] for a brilliant solution. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:24, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::One can remove contents and the burden is on the person who wants to add the new info to address the reasons in a comment and/or to address the reasons via a new way. Adding it to a subpage and then linking that is what you could have done, not requiring me to go here to get help. You are not the discussion leader on the subject. You aren't free to add any content to any page and have authority for it to stay there. I'll once again close my comment that your interaction has not been constructive; you did not address points or suggest or implement a solution but just insisted you don't even need to address them and just went to do edit warring. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:59, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::::Indeed, you are not constructive. Just stuborn. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 14:09, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
== New curatorship request ==
I started a curatorship request at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Codename Noreste]]. Can a custodian place it in [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice|the site notice]]? Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:51, 23 March 2026 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 23:41, 23 March 2026 (UTC)
::Can you increment [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice id]] by one digit? If done, the site notice will appear again. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:30, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
:::A little more than a week has passed, and there is one support. Would a custodian close my request, please? Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:26, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
::::{{done}} https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=MediaWiki%3ASitenotice_id&diff=2802001&oldid=2800237 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:51, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodians and bureaucrats ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Call for custodians and bureaucrats]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:46, 12 May 2026 (UTC)''</div>
Can I encourage currently active [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators]] to consider putting themselves forward for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodianship]] and/or [[Wikiversity:Bureaucrat|bureaucratship]]. We have a productive, capable group of [[Wikiversity:Staff|staff]] at the moment who should probably have more rights to better support the project and we are light on for active custodians and bureaucrats. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:34, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I'm willing to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 11:48, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Awesome. Could you self-nominate at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:59, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I filed my nomination, but according to the custodianship policy, I am running for probationary custodianship, and after a period of four weeks, I will run again for permanent custodianship to determine if I have performed well and professionally. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:00, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:I'm also willing to run for bureaucratship as I imagine my activity levels should remain sufficient. I could put in a nomination within the next week or so. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 12:55, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::Wonderful. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:09, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Would also like to help! [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:25, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodian mentors==
If you have more than 3 months experience as a custodian, please consider listing yourself as potential mentor for probationary custodians: [[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors]]
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:27, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
ocrr10zyrefhzo6h4pxhvcdtib8aif8
2808994
2808982
2026-05-14T00:08:28Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Call for custodians and bureaucrats */ Reply
2808994
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Shortcut|WV:NOTICE|WV:AN}}
{{/Header}}
== GRP socks ==
* {{user|170.83.119.121}}
* {{user|181.115.60.123}}
Long-term abuse: [[w:WP:LTA/GRP]]. [[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 02:13, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
:{{Done}} -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 03:26, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::Revdel request: [[Special:Contributions/154.246.203.175]] —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:44, 7 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/189.223.144.31|189.223.144.31]] ==
* {{user|189.223.144.31}}
* Report reason: Open proxy (used by [[w:WP:LTA/GRP|GRP]]), left an abusive edit summary on my talk page.
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 01:50, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
:{{Done}} -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 02:09, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3|2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3]] ==
* {{user|2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3}}
* Report reason: Edit warring on [[Types of Dinosaur]] (see [[special:diff/2521104|1]], [[special:diff/2521102|2]], [[special:diff/2521100|3]], [[special:diff/2521098|4]])
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 23:10, 16 May 2023 (UTC)
:Now blocked, thanks! -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 00:56, 17 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/I Join john|I Join john]] ==
* {{user|I Join john}}
* Report reason: spam
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 02:58, 10 June 2023 (UTC)
:Late notice, but for recording purposes: blocked by Dave Braunschweig on June 17. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:52, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
== New special page to fight spam ==
{{int:please-translate}}
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Hello,
We are replacing most of the functionalities of [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] with a new special page called [[Special:BlockedExternalDomains]]. In this special page, admins can simply add a domain and notes on the block (usually reasoning and/or link to a discussion) and the added domain would automatically be blocked to be linked in Wikis anymore (including its subdomains). Content of this list is stored in [[MediaWiki:BlockedExternalDomains.json]]. You can see [[:w:fa:Special:BlockedExternalDomains]] as an example. Check [[phab:T337431|the phabricator ticket]] for more information.
This would make fighting spam easier and safer without needing to know regex or accidentally breaking wikis while also addressing the need to have some notes next to each domain on why it’s blocked. It would also make the list of blocked domains searchable and would make editing Wikis in general faster by optimizing matching links added against the blocked list in every edit (see [[phab:T337431#8936498]] for some measurements).
If you want to migrate your entries in [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]], there is a python script in [[phab:P49299]] that would produce contents of [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] and [[MediaWiki:BlockedExternalDomains.json]] for you automatically migrating off simple regex cases.
Note that this new feature doesn’t support regex (for complex cases) nor URL paths matching. Also it doesn’t support bypass by spam whitelist. For those, please either keep using [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] or switch to an abuse filter if possible. And adding a link to the list might take up to five minutes to be fully in effect (due to server-side caching, this is already the case with the old system) and admins and bots automatically bypass the blocked list.
Let me know if you have any questions or encounter any issues. Happy editing. [[User:Ladsgroup|Amir]] ([[User talk:Ladsgroup|talk]]) 09:41, 19 June 2023 (UTC)
</div>
<!-- Message sent by User:Ladsgroup@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Ladsgroup/target_ANs&oldid=25167735 -->
==Vandal: [[User:Ceoalphonso]]==
They were spamming on Wikipedia, later claimed that their account was hacked. They were blocked for having a compromised account. They have started editing Wikiversity. High risk of future vandalism. They should be blocked for having a compromised account, in spite of the fact that this is dubious, because of AGF. [[User:Janhrach|Janhrach]] ([[User talk:Janhrach|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Janhrach|contribs]]) 07:45, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
:This user hasn't edited since February. Unless their editing picks back up and becomes problematic, there's no action necessary at this time. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 12:47, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
::{{ping|Atcovi}} They have not been active here since February, but they have made several edits across other wikis in the meantime. Their edits include highly visible vandalism, such as spamming in TemplateData. I would highly recommend a block. [[User:Janhrach|Janhrach]] ([[User talk:Janhrach|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Janhrach|contribs]]) 14:52, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
:::Since I still personally disagree, I'll leave this another custodian to take whatever action they deem reasonable. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 17:06, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
::::{{not done}} user has not edited since February 2023, so for record-keeping purposes, I'm marking this request as stale. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:59, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
== [[Special:Contributions/2600:1003:B05E:6EC6:0:33:95BF:E701]] ==
* {{user|2600:1003:B05E:6EC6:0:33:95BF:E701}}
Cross-wiki vandalism. --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 01:21, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:22, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
::Thank you, Koavf! --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 01:26, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
== Maintenance vs administration ==
Bumping a [[User_talk:Tule-hog#Wikiversity:Administration|redirect for discussion]] concerning custodianship. [[User:Tule-hog|Tule-hog]] ([[User talk:Tule-hog|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tule-hog|contribs]]) 09:50, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
== Vandalism ==
Please block [[Special:Contributions/76.121.217.240]]. --[[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 03:09, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:Not a local sysop here but {{done}}. --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 03:18, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:: {{comment}} Page deleted. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 03:21, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Hi it's me again. Please block [[Special:Contributions/216.186.51.108]] — @[[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] @[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]]. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:54, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
::::{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 19:58, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Hello. Again and again. Please block [[Special:Contributions/152.22.75.23]]. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:48, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Already done by Aramil. I think Wikiversity should take action against proxies. I suspect that these IPs are proxies and belong to the same person. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:52, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Possibly {{ping|Mu301}} has some experience dealing with proxies? —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:58, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
== Import of aiCAMstir ==
[[File:'aiCAMstir' icon, © Stephan Kallee, AluStir, CC-BY-SA 4.0.png|thumb|aiCAMstir]]
The '''aiCAMstir''' project is a non-commercial collaborative project on using Artificial Intelligence in Welding. We want to create a mirror of the www_aicamstir_com web site, before this will be taken down. We do not want to add the links to the project partners but include references to published papers. However, the software settings seems to restrict the use of web links, and recommended to get in touch with an admin (By the way, I am an [[Commons:Category:'aiCAMstir'|experienced Wikimedia user]]). Do you want to allow me, to insert weblinks into references? [[User:'aiCAMstir'|'aiCAMstir']] ([[User talk:'aiCAMstir'|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/'aiCAMstir'|contribs]]) 11:27, 1 February 2025 (UTC)
== Block of MarsSterlingTurner ==
(Deleted and reposted to [[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#Block_of_MarsSterlingTurner]]. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 04:42, 10 April 2025 (UTC))
== Edit warring by [[User:Harold Foppele]] ==
{{user|Harold Foppele}} is edit warring at [[Is LGBTQIA+ being forced on society?]] (wikidebate) to add some long AI-generated text with broken wikisyntax and insists on my talk page they don't need to address my 4 specific reasons for the removal ([[Special:Diff/2784967]]) such as the broken wikisyntax. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 14:51, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:You do not revert an editors contribution.
:You done that before, [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Prototyperspective&action=edit§ion=10| See here] I do not have to address your 4 reasons, that is where a discussion/talk page is for. What Wikidebate Is Not: Explicitly, it's not a platform to defend preferred points of view (similar to WP:NOTSOAPBOX or WP:NOTFORUM). Focus on gathering all sides neutrally, not advocacy. This is not a discussion. Removing edits that you do not like in a debat is not done [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 14:41, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:I've moved the LLM-generated text to [[Is LGBTQIA+ being forced on society?/Response from an LLM]]. The contribution breaks the wikisyntax and doesn't follow the applied format as the other arguments. Perhaps for the resource, a subpage with an input from an AI (which afaik tries its best to maintain a NPOV) could be useful. I'd advise [[User:Harold Foppele]] to provide a link to the conversation on said subpage. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 23:18, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks, I think this is solved now. Hopefully, the user will interact more constructively in the future. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 11:40, 14 January 2026 (UTC)
:::If you talk to a user before acting that would prevent problems. Beside a curator, no one is allowed to edit users contributions. Esp. in debates. Files are even stricter there. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 13:05, 14 January 2026 (UTC)
::::That is not true. I talked to you in 1. the edit summary and 2. on my talk page where you insisted "this is not a discussion" and that you don't need to address my 4 reasons. People are not free to dump anything they want onto pages and then have it stay there with reverts and removals being impossible. Contentious edits like that need consensus for inclusion or the removal reasons to be addressed. Your interaction has been very nonconstructive and hopefully this is not a wider phenomenon on the site which if so would cause massive quality problems. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 11:35, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::You did mention it in the edit while deleting it. The 'contentious' comment is still there with an expansion to a subpage. It is not you who decide what is dump or not, or what is contentious, that is what custodians are for. A simple comment with a ping at the talk page or the user page would be sufficient to start a discussion and reach consensus. If no consensus is reached, the help of a custodian can be sought. You are not the discussion leader on the subject. Wikiversity lives by AGF (Assume Good Faith). So I assume that for you as well. I admire @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] for a brilliant solution. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:24, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::One can remove contents and the burden is on the person who wants to add the new info to address the reasons in a comment and/or to address the reasons via a new way. Adding it to a subpage and then linking that is what you could have done, not requiring me to go here to get help. You are not the discussion leader on the subject. You aren't free to add any content to any page and have authority for it to stay there. I'll once again close my comment that your interaction has not been constructive; you did not address points or suggest or implement a solution but just insisted you don't even need to address them and just went to do edit warring. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:59, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::::Indeed, you are not constructive. Just stuborn. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 14:09, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
== New curatorship request ==
I started a curatorship request at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Codename Noreste]]. Can a custodian place it in [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice|the site notice]]? Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:51, 23 March 2026 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 23:41, 23 March 2026 (UTC)
::Can you increment [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice id]] by one digit? If done, the site notice will appear again. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:30, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
:::A little more than a week has passed, and there is one support. Would a custodian close my request, please? Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:26, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
::::{{done}} https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=MediaWiki%3ASitenotice_id&diff=2802001&oldid=2800237 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:51, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodians and bureaucrats ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Call for custodians and bureaucrats]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:46, 12 May 2026 (UTC)''</div>
Can I encourage currently active [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators]] to consider putting themselves forward for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodianship]] and/or [[Wikiversity:Bureaucrat|bureaucratship]]. We have a productive, capable group of [[Wikiversity:Staff|staff]] at the moment who should probably have more rights to better support the project and we are light on for active custodians and bureaucrats. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:34, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I'm willing to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 11:48, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Awesome. Could you self-nominate at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:59, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I filed my nomination, but according to the custodianship policy, I am running for probationary custodianship, and after a period of four weeks, I will run again for permanent custodianship to determine if I have performed well and professionally. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:00, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:I'm also willing to run for bureaucratship as I imagine my activity levels should remain sufficient. I could put in a nomination within the next week or so. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 12:55, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::Wonderful. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:09, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Would also like to help! [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:25, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::Merci beaucoup :) When you're ready, you can self-nominate for probationary custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:08, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodian mentors==
If you have more than 3 months experience as a custodian, please consider listing yourself as potential mentor for probationary custodians: [[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors]]
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:27, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
9wix4wir6jiexewc95rqxlr3o6fj1l4
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Codename Noreste
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Removing the shortcut template in preparation of the header.
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{{/Header}}
== GRP socks ==
* {{user|170.83.119.121}}
* {{user|181.115.60.123}}
Long-term abuse: [[w:WP:LTA/GRP]]. [[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 02:13, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
:{{Done}} -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 03:26, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::Revdel request: [[Special:Contributions/154.246.203.175]] —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:44, 7 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/189.223.144.31|189.223.144.31]] ==
* {{user|189.223.144.31}}
* Report reason: Open proxy (used by [[w:WP:LTA/GRP|GRP]]), left an abusive edit summary on my talk page.
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 01:50, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
:{{Done}} -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 02:09, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3|2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3]] ==
* {{user|2601:206:8580:35D0:714E:77DC:EAE3:DFE3}}
* Report reason: Edit warring on [[Types of Dinosaur]] (see [[special:diff/2521104|1]], [[special:diff/2521102|2]], [[special:diff/2521100|3]], [[special:diff/2521098|4]])
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 23:10, 16 May 2023 (UTC)
:Now blocked, thanks! -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 00:56, 17 May 2023 (UTC)
== [[special:contribs/I Join john|I Join john]] ==
* {{user|I Join john}}
* Report reason: spam
[[User:Leonidlednev|Leonidlednev]] ([[User talk:Leonidlednev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leonidlednev|contribs]]) 02:58, 10 June 2023 (UTC)
:Late notice, but for recording purposes: blocked by Dave Braunschweig on June 17. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:52, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
== New special page to fight spam ==
{{int:please-translate}}
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Hello,
We are replacing most of the functionalities of [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] with a new special page called [[Special:BlockedExternalDomains]]. In this special page, admins can simply add a domain and notes on the block (usually reasoning and/or link to a discussion) and the added domain would automatically be blocked to be linked in Wikis anymore (including its subdomains). Content of this list is stored in [[MediaWiki:BlockedExternalDomains.json]]. You can see [[:w:fa:Special:BlockedExternalDomains]] as an example. Check [[phab:T337431|the phabricator ticket]] for more information.
This would make fighting spam easier and safer without needing to know regex or accidentally breaking wikis while also addressing the need to have some notes next to each domain on why it’s blocked. It would also make the list of blocked domains searchable and would make editing Wikis in general faster by optimizing matching links added against the blocked list in every edit (see [[phab:T337431#8936498]] for some measurements).
If you want to migrate your entries in [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]], there is a python script in [[phab:P49299]] that would produce contents of [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] and [[MediaWiki:BlockedExternalDomains.json]] for you automatically migrating off simple regex cases.
Note that this new feature doesn’t support regex (for complex cases) nor URL paths matching. Also it doesn’t support bypass by spam whitelist. For those, please either keep using [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] or switch to an abuse filter if possible. And adding a link to the list might take up to five minutes to be fully in effect (due to server-side caching, this is already the case with the old system) and admins and bots automatically bypass the blocked list.
Let me know if you have any questions or encounter any issues. Happy editing. [[User:Ladsgroup|Amir]] ([[User talk:Ladsgroup|talk]]) 09:41, 19 June 2023 (UTC)
</div>
<!-- Message sent by User:Ladsgroup@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Ladsgroup/target_ANs&oldid=25167735 -->
==Vandal: [[User:Ceoalphonso]]==
They were spamming on Wikipedia, later claimed that their account was hacked. They were blocked for having a compromised account. They have started editing Wikiversity. High risk of future vandalism. They should be blocked for having a compromised account, in spite of the fact that this is dubious, because of AGF. [[User:Janhrach|Janhrach]] ([[User talk:Janhrach|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Janhrach|contribs]]) 07:45, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
:This user hasn't edited since February. Unless their editing picks back up and becomes problematic, there's no action necessary at this time. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 12:47, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
::{{ping|Atcovi}} They have not been active here since February, but they have made several edits across other wikis in the meantime. Their edits include highly visible vandalism, such as spamming in TemplateData. I would highly recommend a block. [[User:Janhrach|Janhrach]] ([[User talk:Janhrach|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Janhrach|contribs]]) 14:52, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
:::Since I still personally disagree, I'll leave this another custodian to take whatever action they deem reasonable. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 17:06, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
::::{{not done}} user has not edited since February 2023, so for record-keeping purposes, I'm marking this request as stale. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:59, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
== [[Special:Contributions/2600:1003:B05E:6EC6:0:33:95BF:E701]] ==
* {{user|2600:1003:B05E:6EC6:0:33:95BF:E701}}
Cross-wiki vandalism. --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 01:21, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:22, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
::Thank you, Koavf! --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 01:26, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
== Maintenance vs administration ==
Bumping a [[User_talk:Tule-hog#Wikiversity:Administration|redirect for discussion]] concerning custodianship. [[User:Tule-hog|Tule-hog]] ([[User talk:Tule-hog|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tule-hog|contribs]]) 09:50, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
== Vandalism ==
Please block [[Special:Contributions/76.121.217.240]]. --[[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 03:09, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:Not a local sysop here but {{done}}. --[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]] ([[User talk:SHB2000|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/SHB2000|contribs]]) 03:18, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:: {{comment}} Page deleted. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 03:21, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Hi it's me again. Please block [[Special:Contributions/216.186.51.108]] — @[[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] @[[User:SHB2000|SHB2000]]. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:54, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
::::{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 19:58, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Hello. Again and again. Please block [[Special:Contributions/152.22.75.23]]. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:48, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Already done by Aramil. I think Wikiversity should take action against proxies. I suspect that these IPs are proxies and belong to the same person. [[User:Tres Libras|Tres Libras]] ([[User talk:Tres Libras|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tres Libras|contribs]]) 19:52, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Possibly {{ping|Mu301}} has some experience dealing with proxies? —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:58, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
== Import of aiCAMstir ==
[[File:'aiCAMstir' icon, © Stephan Kallee, AluStir, CC-BY-SA 4.0.png|thumb|aiCAMstir]]
The '''aiCAMstir''' project is a non-commercial collaborative project on using Artificial Intelligence in Welding. We want to create a mirror of the www_aicamstir_com web site, before this will be taken down. We do not want to add the links to the project partners but include references to published papers. However, the software settings seems to restrict the use of web links, and recommended to get in touch with an admin (By the way, I am an [[Commons:Category:'aiCAMstir'|experienced Wikimedia user]]). Do you want to allow me, to insert weblinks into references? [[User:'aiCAMstir'|'aiCAMstir']] ([[User talk:'aiCAMstir'|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/'aiCAMstir'|contribs]]) 11:27, 1 February 2025 (UTC)
== Block of MarsSterlingTurner ==
(Deleted and reposted to [[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#Block_of_MarsSterlingTurner]]. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 04:42, 10 April 2025 (UTC))
== Edit warring by [[User:Harold Foppele]] ==
{{user|Harold Foppele}} is edit warring at [[Is LGBTQIA+ being forced on society?]] (wikidebate) to add some long AI-generated text with broken wikisyntax and insists on my talk page they don't need to address my 4 specific reasons for the removal ([[Special:Diff/2784967]]) such as the broken wikisyntax. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 14:51, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:You do not revert an editors contribution.
:You done that before, [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Prototyperspective&action=edit§ion=10| See here] I do not have to address your 4 reasons, that is where a discussion/talk page is for. What Wikidebate Is Not: Explicitly, it's not a platform to defend preferred points of view (similar to WP:NOTSOAPBOX or WP:NOTFORUM). Focus on gathering all sides neutrally, not advocacy. This is not a discussion. Removing edits that you do not like in a debat is not done [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 14:41, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:I've moved the LLM-generated text to [[Is LGBTQIA+ being forced on society?/Response from an LLM]]. The contribution breaks the wikisyntax and doesn't follow the applied format as the other arguments. Perhaps for the resource, a subpage with an input from an AI (which afaik tries its best to maintain a NPOV) could be useful. I'd advise [[User:Harold Foppele]] to provide a link to the conversation on said subpage. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 23:18, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks, I think this is solved now. Hopefully, the user will interact more constructively in the future. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 11:40, 14 January 2026 (UTC)
:::If you talk to a user before acting that would prevent problems. Beside a curator, no one is allowed to edit users contributions. Esp. in debates. Files are even stricter there. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 13:05, 14 January 2026 (UTC)
::::That is not true. I talked to you in 1. the edit summary and 2. on my talk page where you insisted "this is not a discussion" and that you don't need to address my 4 reasons. People are not free to dump anything they want onto pages and then have it stay there with reverts and removals being impossible. Contentious edits like that need consensus for inclusion or the removal reasons to be addressed. Your interaction has been very nonconstructive and hopefully this is not a wider phenomenon on the site which if so would cause massive quality problems. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 11:35, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::You did mention it in the edit while deleting it. The 'contentious' comment is still there with an expansion to a subpage. It is not you who decide what is dump or not, or what is contentious, that is what custodians are for. A simple comment with a ping at the talk page or the user page would be sufficient to start a discussion and reach consensus. If no consensus is reached, the help of a custodian can be sought. You are not the discussion leader on the subject. Wikiversity lives by AGF (Assume Good Faith). So I assume that for you as well. I admire @[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] for a brilliant solution. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:24, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::One can remove contents and the burden is on the person who wants to add the new info to address the reasons in a comment and/or to address the reasons via a new way. Adding it to a subpage and then linking that is what you could have done, not requiring me to go here to get help. You are not the discussion leader on the subject. You aren't free to add any content to any page and have authority for it to stay there. I'll once again close my comment that your interaction has not been constructive; you did not address points or suggest or implement a solution but just insisted you don't even need to address them and just went to do edit warring. [[User:Prototyperspective|Prototyperspective]] ([[User talk:Prototyperspective|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Prototyperspective|contribs]]) 12:59, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::::Indeed, you are not constructive. Just stuborn. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 14:09, 15 January 2026 (UTC)
== New curatorship request ==
I started a curatorship request at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Codename Noreste]]. Can a custodian place it in [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice|the site notice]]? Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:51, 23 March 2026 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 23:41, 23 March 2026 (UTC)
::Can you increment [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice id]] by one digit? If done, the site notice will appear again. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:30, 24 March 2026 (UTC)
:::A little more than a week has passed, and there is one support. Would a custodian close my request, please? Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:26, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
::::{{done}} https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=MediaWiki%3ASitenotice_id&diff=2802001&oldid=2800237 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:51, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodians and bureaucrats ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved from [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Call for custodians and bureaucrats]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:46, 12 May 2026 (UTC)''</div>
Can I encourage currently active [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators]] to consider putting themselves forward for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodianship]] and/or [[Wikiversity:Bureaucrat|bureaucratship]]. We have a productive, capable group of [[Wikiversity:Staff|staff]] at the moment who should probably have more rights to better support the project and we are light on for active custodians and bureaucrats. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:34, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
: I'm willing to do so. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 11:48, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
::Awesome. Could you self-nominate at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:59, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::: I filed my nomination, but according to the custodianship policy, I am running for probationary custodianship, and after a period of four weeks, I will run again for permanent custodianship to determine if I have performed well and professionally. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:00, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:I'm also willing to run for bureaucratship as I imagine my activity levels should remain sufficient. I could put in a nomination within the next week or so. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 12:55, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::Wonderful. [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:09, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
:Would also like to help! [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:25, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::Merci beaucoup :) When you're ready, you can self-nominate for probationary custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:08, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodian mentors==
If you have more than 3 months experience as a custodian, please consider listing yourself as potential mentor for probationary custodians: [[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors]]
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:27, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
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Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship
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/* Nominations for Custodianship */
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{{/Instructions}}
== Nominations for Custodianship ==
;Notes:
#Candidates for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodianship]] are listed below.
#Candidates must be 18 years of age or older, of legal age in place of residence, and be familiar with [[Meta:Privacy policy]].
#Archived requests can be seen at [[Special:PrefixIndex/Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/]]
{{Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste}}
{{Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/PieWriter}}
{{clear}}
== See also ==
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy|CheckUser]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curators|Curators]]
*[[Wikiversity:Custodianship|Custodianship]]
**[[Wikiversity:Custodian Mentorship|Custodian Mentorship]]
**[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]]
**[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived|Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]] - archive of failed nominations
**[[Wikiversity:Custodian requests|Custodian requests]]
**[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|List of custodian mentors]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship]]
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/* See also */
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{{/Instructions}}
== Nominations for Custodianship ==
;Notes:
#Candidates for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodianship]] are listed below.
#Candidates must be 18 years of age or older, of legal age in place of residence, and be familiar with [[Meta:Privacy policy]].
#Archived requests can be seen at [[Special:PrefixIndex/Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/]]
{{Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste}}
{{Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/PieWriter}}
{{clear}}
== See also ==
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy|CheckUser]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curatorship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Custodianship|Custodianship]]
**[[Wikiversity:Custodian Mentorship|Custodian Mentorship]]
**[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship/Archive of nominations for full custodianship]]
**[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Archived|Candidates for Custodianship/Archived]] - archive of failed nominations
**[[Wikiversity:Custodian requests|Custodian requests]]
**[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|List of custodian mentors]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship]]
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Wikiversity:Custodianship
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{{pp-protected|small=yes}}
{{Policy|WV:CUST}}
[[File:Wikiversity Administrator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
A Wikiversity '''custodian''' is an experienced and trusted user who can [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]], [[#Deletion and restoration of pages|delete]] and restore pages as well as [[#User blocks|block]] users from editing. Custodians are the Wikiversity equivalent of administrators, also known as sysops, bibliotecarios (librarians), and moderators.
The English Wikiversity currently has {{NUMBEROFADMINS}} custodian{{PLURAL:{{NUMBEROFADMINS}}||s}} ([[Special:ListUsers/sysop|full list]]).
{{center top}}'''[[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|Request assistance]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Support staff#Support staff directory|List of custodians]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Requests for custodianship]]'''{{center bottom}}
== How does one become a custodian? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can custodians do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a custodian. If you have a good editing record then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of custodianship. If you are still interested in custodianship, here is the process it takes:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of custodian privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodians agree to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a [[w:Probation (workplace)|probationary]] custodian for a period of at least '''four weeks'''. You will have all the privileges described below. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement before the probationary period is complete, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise your mentor may [[Meta:SRP|request removal of custodian privileges]] after 48 hours, without any further notice or community discussion.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | III
|
<div id="Evaluation">
;Evaluation
</div>
Your mentor will submit a request for comments at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]] for a period of at least '''seven days''' when you are ready. During that period Wikiversity participants can evaluate how well the custodian privileges are used and how you conducted yourself at Wikiversity.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | IV
|
<div id="Custodianship">
;Custodianship
</div>
After one week of evaluation, a bureaucrat will make the final decision based on the arguments provided in the discussion. If you are approved, you will be a [[#Notes|permanent custodian]]. If you are not approved, your probationary period may either be extended or you may request another mentorship later.
|}
== What can custodians do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/WHAT}}
=== Deletion and undeletion of pages ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/D}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]]
Custodians can delete pages including images, categories, templates, etc. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and undeletions can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]].
Custodians can also delete individual versions with the [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|RevisionDelete]] feature. This is particularly useful to remove materials that violate [[Wikiversity:Copyrights|copyrights]] or other applicable law.
Before you delete a page, read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]]. See also: [[Wikiversity:Deletion policy]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
Custodians can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian upon request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Custodians have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/$2|$2]] ([[User_talk:$2|talk]]) to last version by [[User:$1|$1]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== User blocks ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/B}}
Custodians can block users from editing by specifying a username, an IP address or range of addresses. Blocks can be temporary or permanent. Most frequently, blocking occurs in response to obvious and repeated vandalism. When blocking a user, a reason for blocking must be provided which is displayed in the [[Special:Log/block|block log]]. It is also possible to block IP addresses from creating new user accounts. See [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]].
=== Editing MediaWiki [[Wikiversity:Namespaces|namespace]] ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/MW}}
Custodians are able to edit system messages (the standard texts that are used by the MediaWiki software).
=== Import ===
Custodians have access to the [[Special:Import|Import tool]], to bring materials from Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta.Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
=== User rights ===
Custodians can grant and revoke any of the following permissions from a user:
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curator]]
* [[Wikiversity:Event organizers|Event organizer]]
* [[Wikiversity:IP block exemption|IP block exemption]]
* [[Wikiversity:Temporary account IP viewer|Temporary account IP viewer]]
However, custodians cannot grant (or revoke) bot, bureaucrat, custodian, or interface administrator permissions to any user, as it requires the [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] permission respectively.
== How are custodians expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/E}}
Custodians are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
For a discussion of possible failure to act professionally, see a proposed recusal policy at [[Wikiversity:Recusal]].
==Problems with custodians==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, user block, editing MediaWiki namespace pages, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity custodian, the first thing to do is leave a message on that custodian's user discussion page. Custodians should always be able to explain how their actions support Wikiversity. If you cannot get satisfaction from discussion with the custodian, you can place comments, suggestions, complaints or questions at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]]. Try to resolve all custodian problems by discussion.
Custodians can lose their status for [[wikt:egregious|egregious]] violations of policies. Loss of custodianship involves a process that establishes community consensus. If a specific complaint is not resolved at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]] then a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|Community Review]] can be initiated to establish if there is community consensus in support for the custodianship of the custodian who is the subject of the unresolved complaint. At the end of the review, Wikiversity bureaucrats will review the discussion. If a bureaucrat decides that there is good reason for removal of a custodianship, that bureaucrat will go to the meta-wiki and [[m:Requests for permissions|request]] that stewards review the community discussion. If a steward agrees that the Wikiversity community has reached consensus about a problem custodian, then that steward can terminate the custodianship of the custodian.
If you have a question about an action of a probationary custodian, you should consult their mentor(s). Actions of a probationary custodian are the responsibility of their mentor(s) during their probationary period. Partially depending on agreements made in the probationary candidacy, and with respect for the 48 hour period to find a new mentor, a request to remove custodianship for a probationary custodian may often be made at Meta by any mentor or bureaucrat without need for community consensus. The local process to remove custodianship should only need to be used as a last resort, because of this alternative option.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/N}}
* Custodianship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for custodianship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, custodians have no more power or weight than other users.
* Custodians should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Steward requests/Permissions|steward will be asked to remove the rights]].<ref>See also a decision made in [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Archive/24#Reviews for Inactivity]].</ref>
== Useful reads for custodians ==
{{Wikiversity organization}}
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
*[[Special:ListUsers/sysop|List of current Wikiversity custodians and bureaucrats]]
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curators]]
*[[Wikiversity:History of Wikiversity/Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
*[[Special:ListGroupRights]]
*[[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action/Archive/24#Reviews_for_Inactivity]] (Inactivity policy for Wikiversity Custodians)
{{Official policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship| ]]
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/* User rights */ Clarify: However, custodians cannot grant or revoke custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator permissions. These actions requires [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] and/or steward permissions.
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{{pp-protected|small=yes}}
{{Policy|WV:CUST}}
[[File:Wikiversity Administrator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
A Wikiversity '''custodian''' is an experienced and trusted user who can [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]], [[#Deletion and restoration of pages|delete]] and restore pages as well as [[#User blocks|block]] users from editing. Custodians are the Wikiversity equivalent of administrators, also known as sysops, bibliotecarios (librarians), and moderators.
The English Wikiversity currently has {{NUMBEROFADMINS}} custodian{{PLURAL:{{NUMBEROFADMINS}}||s}} ([[Special:ListUsers/sysop|full list]]).
{{center top}}'''[[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|Request assistance]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Support staff#Support staff directory|List of custodians]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Requests for custodianship]]'''{{center bottom}}
== How does one become a custodian? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can custodians do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a custodian. If you have a good editing record then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of custodianship. If you are still interested in custodianship, here is the process it takes:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of custodian privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodians agree to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a [[w:Probation (workplace)|probationary]] custodian for a period of at least '''four weeks'''. You will have all the privileges described below. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement before the probationary period is complete, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise your mentor may [[Meta:SRP|request removal of custodian privileges]] after 48 hours, without any further notice or community discussion.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | III
|
<div id="Evaluation">
;Evaluation
</div>
Your mentor will submit a request for comments at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]] for a period of at least '''seven days''' when you are ready. During that period Wikiversity participants can evaluate how well the custodian privileges are used and how you conducted yourself at Wikiversity.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | IV
|
<div id="Custodianship">
;Custodianship
</div>
After one week of evaluation, a bureaucrat will make the final decision based on the arguments provided in the discussion. If you are approved, you will be a [[#Notes|permanent custodian]]. If you are not approved, your probationary period may either be extended or you may request another mentorship later.
|}
== What can custodians do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/WHAT}}
=== Deletion and undeletion of pages ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/D}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]]
Custodians can delete pages including images, categories, templates, etc. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and undeletions can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]].
Custodians can also delete individual versions with the [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|RevisionDelete]] feature. This is particularly useful to remove materials that violate [[Wikiversity:Copyrights|copyrights]] or other applicable law.
Before you delete a page, read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]]. See also: [[Wikiversity:Deletion policy]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
Custodians can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian upon request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Custodians have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/$2|$2]] ([[User_talk:$2|talk]]) to last version by [[User:$1|$1]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== User blocks ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/B}}
Custodians can block users from editing by specifying a username, an IP address or range of addresses. Blocks can be temporary or permanent. Most frequently, blocking occurs in response to obvious and repeated vandalism. When blocking a user, a reason for blocking must be provided which is displayed in the [[Special:Log/block|block log]]. It is also possible to block IP addresses from creating new user accounts. See [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]].
=== Editing MediaWiki [[Wikiversity:Namespaces|namespace]] ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/MW}}
Custodians are able to edit system messages (the standard texts that are used by the MediaWiki software).
=== Import ===
Custodians have access to the [[Special:Import|Import tool]], to bring materials from Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta.Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
=== User rights ===
Custodians can grant and revoke any of the following permissions from a user:
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curator]]
* [[Wikiversity:Event organizers|Event organizer]]
* [[Wikiversity:IP block exemption|IP block exemption]]
* [[Wikiversity:Temporary account IP viewer|Temporary account IP viewer]]
However, custodians cannot grant or revoke custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator permissions. These actions requires [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] and/or steward permissions.
== How are custodians expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/E}}
Custodians are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
For a discussion of possible failure to act professionally, see a proposed recusal policy at [[Wikiversity:Recusal]].
==Problems with custodians==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, user block, editing MediaWiki namespace pages, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity custodian, the first thing to do is leave a message on that custodian's user discussion page. Custodians should always be able to explain how their actions support Wikiversity. If you cannot get satisfaction from discussion with the custodian, you can place comments, suggestions, complaints or questions at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]]. Try to resolve all custodian problems by discussion.
Custodians can lose their status for [[wikt:egregious|egregious]] violations of policies. Loss of custodianship involves a process that establishes community consensus. If a specific complaint is not resolved at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]] then a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|Community Review]] can be initiated to establish if there is community consensus in support for the custodianship of the custodian who is the subject of the unresolved complaint. At the end of the review, Wikiversity bureaucrats will review the discussion. If a bureaucrat decides that there is good reason for removal of a custodianship, that bureaucrat will go to the meta-wiki and [[m:Requests for permissions|request]] that stewards review the community discussion. If a steward agrees that the Wikiversity community has reached consensus about a problem custodian, then that steward can terminate the custodianship of the custodian.
If you have a question about an action of a probationary custodian, you should consult their mentor(s). Actions of a probationary custodian are the responsibility of their mentor(s) during their probationary period. Partially depending on agreements made in the probationary candidacy, and with respect for the 48 hour period to find a new mentor, a request to remove custodianship for a probationary custodian may often be made at Meta by any mentor or bureaucrat without need for community consensus. The local process to remove custodianship should only need to be used as a last resort, because of this alternative option.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/N}}
* Custodianship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for custodianship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, custodians have no more power or weight than other users.
* Custodians should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Steward requests/Permissions|steward will be asked to remove the rights]].<ref>See also a decision made in [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Archive/24#Reviews for Inactivity]].</ref>
== Useful reads for custodians ==
{{Wikiversity organization}}
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
*[[Special:ListUsers/sysop|List of current Wikiversity custodians and bureaucrats]]
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curators]]
*[[Wikiversity:History of Wikiversity/Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
*[[Special:ListGroupRights]]
*[[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action/Archive/24#Reviews_for_Inactivity]] (Inactivity policy for Wikiversity Custodians)
{{Official policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship| ]]
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{{Policy|WV:CUST}}
[[File:Wikiversity Administrator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
A Wikiversity '''custodian''' is an experienced and trusted user who can [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]], [[#Deletion and restoration of pages|delete]] and restore pages as well as [[#User blocks|block]] users from editing. Custodians are the Wikiversity equivalent of administrators, also known as sysops, bibliotecarios (librarians), and moderators.
The English Wikiversity currently has {{NUMBEROFADMINS}} custodian{{PLURAL:{{NUMBEROFADMINS}}||s}} ([[Special:ListUsers/sysop|full list]]).
{{center top}}'''[[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|Request assistance]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Support staff#Support staff directory|List of custodians]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Requests for custodianship]]'''{{center bottom}}
== How does one become a custodian? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can custodians do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a custodian. If you have a good editing record then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of custodianship. If you are still interested in custodianship, here is the process it takes:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of custodian privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodians agree to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a [[w:Probation (workplace)|probationary]] custodian for a period of at least '''four weeks'''. You will have all the privileges described below. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement before the probationary period is complete, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise your mentor may [[Meta:SRP|request removal of custodian privileges]] after 48 hours, without any further notice or community discussion.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | III
|
<div id="Evaluation">
;Evaluation
</div>
Your mentor will submit a request for comments at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]] for a period of at least '''seven days''' when you are ready. During that period Wikiversity participants can evaluate how well the custodian privileges are used and how you conducted yourself at Wikiversity.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | IV
|
<div id="Custodianship">
;Custodianship
</div>
After one week of evaluation, a bureaucrat will make the final decision based on the arguments provided in the discussion. If you are approved, you will be a [[#Notes|permanent custodian]]. If you are not approved, your probationary period may either be extended or you may request another mentorship later.
|}
== What can custodians do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/WHAT}}
=== Deletion and undeletion of pages ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/D}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]]
Custodians can delete pages including images, categories, templates, etc. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and undeletions can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]].
Custodians can also delete individual versions with the [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|RevisionDelete]] feature. This is particularly useful to remove materials that violate [[Wikiversity:Copyrights|copyrights]] or other applicable law.
Before you delete a page, read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]]. See also: [[Wikiversity:Deletion policy]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
Custodians can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian upon request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Custodians have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/$2|$2]] ([[User_talk:$2|talk]]) to last version by [[User:$1|$1]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== User blocks ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/B}}
Custodians can block users from editing by specifying a username, an IP address or range of addresses. Blocks can be temporary or permanent. Most frequently, blocking occurs in response to obvious and repeated vandalism. When blocking a user, a reason for blocking must be provided which is displayed in the [[Special:Log/block|block log]]. It is also possible to block IP addresses from creating new user accounts. See [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]].
=== Editing MediaWiki [[Wikiversity:Namespaces|namespace]] ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/MW}}
Custodians are able to edit system messages (the standard texts that are used by the MediaWiki software).
=== Import ===
Custodians have access to the [[Special:Import|Import tool]], to bring materials from Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta.Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
=== User rights ===
Custodians can grant and revoke any of the following permissions from a user:
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curator]]
* [[Wikiversity:Event organizers|Event organizer]]
* [[Wikiversity:IP block exemption|IP block exemption]]
* [[Wikiversity:Temporary account IP viewer|Temporary account IP viewer]]
However, custodians cannot grant or revoke custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator permissions. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] and/or [[m:Steward|steward]] permissions.
== How are custodians expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/E}}
Custodians are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
For a discussion of possible failure to act professionally, see a proposed recusal policy at [[Wikiversity:Recusal]].
==Problems with custodians==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, user block, editing MediaWiki namespace pages, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity custodian, the first thing to do is leave a message on that custodian's user discussion page. Custodians should always be able to explain how their actions support Wikiversity. If you cannot get satisfaction from discussion with the custodian, you can place comments, suggestions, complaints or questions at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]]. Try to resolve all custodian problems by discussion.
Custodians can lose their status for [[wikt:egregious|egregious]] violations of policies. Loss of custodianship involves a process that establishes community consensus. If a specific complaint is not resolved at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]] then a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|Community Review]] can be initiated to establish if there is community consensus in support for the custodianship of the custodian who is the subject of the unresolved complaint. At the end of the review, Wikiversity bureaucrats will review the discussion. If a bureaucrat decides that there is good reason for removal of a custodianship, that bureaucrat will go to the meta-wiki and [[m:Requests for permissions|request]] that stewards review the community discussion. If a steward agrees that the Wikiversity community has reached consensus about a problem custodian, then that steward can terminate the custodianship of the custodian.
If you have a question about an action of a probationary custodian, you should consult their mentor(s). Actions of a probationary custodian are the responsibility of their mentor(s) during their probationary period. Partially depending on agreements made in the probationary candidacy, and with respect for the 48 hour period to find a new mentor, a request to remove custodianship for a probationary custodian may often be made at Meta by any mentor or bureaucrat without need for community consensus. The local process to remove custodianship should only need to be used as a last resort, because of this alternative option.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/N}}
* Custodianship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for custodianship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, custodians have no more power or weight than other users.
* Custodians should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Steward requests/Permissions|steward will be asked to remove the rights]].<ref>See also a decision made in [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Archive/24#Reviews for Inactivity]].</ref>
== Useful reads for custodians ==
{{Wikiversity organization}}
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
*[[Special:ListUsers/sysop|List of current Wikiversity custodians and bureaucrats]]
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curators]]
*[[Wikiversity:History of Wikiversity/Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
*[[Special:ListGroupRights]]
*[[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action/Archive/24#Reviews_for_Inactivity]] (Inactivity policy for Wikiversity Custodians)
{{Official policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship| ]]
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{{Policy|WV:CUST}}
[[File:Wikiversity Administrator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Custodians''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They are experienced and trusted users who can [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages, [[#Deletion and restoration of pages|delete]] and restore pages, and [[#User blocks|block]] or unblock users from editing. Custodians are the Wikiversity equivalent of administrators (also known as sysops, bibliotecarios (librarians), and moderators).
The English Wikiversity currently has {{NUMBEROFADMINS}} custodian{{PLURAL:{{NUMBEROFADMINS}}||s}} ([[Special:ListUsers/sysop|full list]]).
{{center top}}'''[[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|Request assistance]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Support staff#Support staff directory|List of custodians]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Requests for custodianship]]'''{{center bottom}}
== How does one become a custodian? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can custodians do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a custodian. If you have a good editing record then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of custodianship. If you are still interested in custodianship, here is the process it takes:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of custodian privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodians agree to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a [[w:Probation (workplace)|probationary]] custodian for a period of at least '''four weeks'''. You will have all the privileges described below. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement before the probationary period is complete, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise your mentor may [[Meta:SRP|request removal of custodian privileges]] after 48 hours, without any further notice or community discussion.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | III
|
<div id="Evaluation">
;Evaluation
</div>
Your mentor will submit a request for comments at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]] for a period of at least '''seven days''' when you are ready. During that period Wikiversity participants can evaluate how well the custodian privileges are used and how you conducted yourself at Wikiversity.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | IV
|
<div id="Custodianship">
;Custodianship
</div>
After one week of evaluation, a bureaucrat will make the final decision based on the arguments provided in the discussion. If you are approved, you will be a [[#Notes|permanent custodian]]. If you are not approved, your probationary period may either be extended or you may request another mentorship later.
|}
== What can custodians do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/WHAT}}
=== Deletion and undeletion of pages ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/D}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]]
Custodians can delete pages including images, categories, templates, etc. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and undeletions can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]].
Custodians can also delete individual versions with the [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|RevisionDelete]] feature. This is particularly useful to remove materials that violate [[Wikiversity:Copyrights|copyrights]] or other applicable law.
Before you delete a page, read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]]. See also: [[Wikiversity:Deletion policy]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
Custodians can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian upon request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Custodians have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/$2|$2]] ([[User_talk:$2|talk]]) to last version by [[User:$1|$1]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== User blocks ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/B}}
Custodians can block users from editing by specifying a username, an IP address or range of addresses. Blocks can be temporary or permanent. Most frequently, blocking occurs in response to obvious and repeated vandalism. When blocking a user, a reason for blocking must be provided which is displayed in the [[Special:Log/block|block log]]. It is also possible to block IP addresses from creating new user accounts. See [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]].
=== Editing MediaWiki [[Wikiversity:Namespaces|namespace]] ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/MW}}
Custodians are able to edit system messages (the standard texts that are used by the MediaWiki software).
=== Import ===
Custodians have access to the [[Special:Import|Import tool]], to bring materials from Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta.Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
=== User rights ===
Custodians can grant and revoke any of the following permissions from a user:
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curator]]
* [[Wikiversity:Event organizers|Event organizer]]
* [[Wikiversity:IP block exemption|IP block exemption]]
* [[Wikiversity:Temporary account IP viewer|Temporary account IP viewer]]
However, custodians cannot grant or revoke custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator permissions. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] and/or [[m:Steward|steward]] permissions.
== How are custodians expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/E}}
Custodians are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
For a discussion of possible failure to act professionally, see a proposed recusal policy at [[Wikiversity:Recusal]].
==Problems with custodians==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, user block, editing MediaWiki namespace pages, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity custodian, the first thing to do is leave a message on that custodian's user discussion page. Custodians should always be able to explain how their actions support Wikiversity. If you cannot get satisfaction from discussion with the custodian, you can place comments, suggestions, complaints or questions at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]]. Try to resolve all custodian problems by discussion.
Custodians can lose their status for [[wikt:egregious|egregious]] violations of policies. Loss of custodianship involves a process that establishes community consensus. If a specific complaint is not resolved at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]] then a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|Community Review]] can be initiated to establish if there is community consensus in support for the custodianship of the custodian who is the subject of the unresolved complaint. At the end of the review, Wikiversity bureaucrats will review the discussion. If a bureaucrat decides that there is good reason for removal of a custodianship, that bureaucrat will go to the meta-wiki and [[m:Requests for permissions|request]] that stewards review the community discussion. If a steward agrees that the Wikiversity community has reached consensus about a problem custodian, then that steward can terminate the custodianship of the custodian.
If you have a question about an action of a probationary custodian, you should consult their mentor(s). Actions of a probationary custodian are the responsibility of their mentor(s) during their probationary period. Partially depending on agreements made in the probationary candidacy, and with respect for the 48 hour period to find a new mentor, a request to remove custodianship for a probationary custodian may often be made at Meta by any mentor or bureaucrat without need for community consensus. The local process to remove custodianship should only need to be used as a last resort, because of this alternative option.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/N}}
* Custodianship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for custodianship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, custodians have no more power or weight than other users.
* Custodians should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Steward requests/Permissions|steward will be asked to remove the rights]].<ref>See also a decision made in [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Archive/24#Reviews for Inactivity]].</ref>
== Useful reads for custodians ==
{{Wikiversity organization}}
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
*[[Special:ListUsers/sysop|List of current Wikiversity custodians and bureaucrats]]
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curators]]
*[[Wikiversity:History of Wikiversity/Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
*[[Special:ListGroupRights]]
*[[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action/Archive/24#Reviews_for_Inactivity]] (Inactivity policy for Wikiversity Custodians)
{{Official policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship| ]]
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{{Policy|WV:CUST}}
[[File:Wikiversity Administrator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Custodians''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They are experienced and trusted users who can [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages, [[#Deletion and restoration of pages|delete]] and restore pages, and [[#User blocks|block]] or unblock users from editing. Custodians are the Wikiversity equivalent of administrators (also known as sysops, bibliotecarios (librarians), and moderators).
The English Wikiversity currently has {{NUMBEROFADMINS}} custodian{{PLURAL:{{NUMBEROFADMINS}}||s}} ([[Special:ListUsers/sysop|full list]]).
{{center top}}'''[[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|Request assistance]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Support staff#Support staff directory|List of custodians]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Requests for custodianship]]'''{{center bottom}}
== How does one become a custodian? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can custodians do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a custodian. If you have a good editing record then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of custodianship. If you are still interested in custodianship, here is the process it takes:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of custodian privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodians agree to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a [[w:Probation (workplace)|probationary]] custodian for a period of at least '''four weeks'''. You will have all the privileges described below. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement before the probationary period is complete, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise your mentor may [[Meta:SRP|request removal of custodian privileges]] after 48 hours, without any further notice or community discussion.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | III
|
<div id="Evaluation">
;Evaluation
</div>
Your mentor will submit a request for comments at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]] for a period of at least '''seven days''' when you are ready. During that period Wikiversity participants can evaluate how well the custodian privileges are used and how you conducted yourself at Wikiversity.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | IV
|
<div id="Custodianship">
;Custodianship
</div>
After one week of evaluation, a bureaucrat will make the final decision based on the arguments provided in the discussion. If you are approved, you will be a [[#Notes|permanent custodian]]. If you are not approved, your probationary period may either be extended or you may request another mentorship later.
|}
== What can custodians do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/WHAT}}
=== Deletion and undeletion of pages ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/D}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]]
Custodians can delete pages including images, categories, templates, etc. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and undeletions can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]].
Custodians can also delete individual versions with the [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|RevisionDelete]] feature. This is particularly useful to remove materials that violate [[Wikiversity:Copyrights|copyrights]] or other applicable law.
Before you delete a page, read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]]. See also: [[Wikiversity:Deletion policy]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
Custodians can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian upon request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Custodians have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/$2|$2]] ([[User_talk:$2|talk]]) to last version by [[User:$1|$1]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== User blocks ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/B}}
Custodians can block users from editing by specifying a username, an IP address or range of addresses. Blocks can be temporary or permanent. Most frequently, blocking occurs in response to obvious and repeated vandalism. When blocking a user, a reason for blocking must be provided which is displayed in the [[Special:Log/block|block log]]. It is also possible to block IP addresses from creating new user accounts. See [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]].
=== Editing MediaWiki [[Wikiversity:Namespaces|namespace]] ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/MW}}
Custodians are able to edit system messages (the standard texts that are used by the MediaWiki software).
=== Import ===
Custodians have access to the [[Special:Import|Import tool]], to bring materials from Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta.Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
=== User rights ===
Custodians can grant and revoke any of the following permissions from a user:
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curator]]
* [[Wikiversity:Event organizers|Event organizer]]
* [[Wikiversity:IP block exemption|IP block exemption]]
* [[Wikiversity:Temporary account IP viewer|Temporary account IP viewer]]
However, custodians cannot grant or revoke custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator permissions. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] and/or [[m:Steward|steward]] permissions.
== How are custodians expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/E}}
Custodians are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
For a discussion of possible failure to act professionally, see a proposed recusal policy at [[Wikiversity:Recusal]].
==Problems with custodians==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, user block, editing MediaWiki namespace pages, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity custodian, the first thing to do is leave a message on that custodian's user discussion page. Custodians should always be able to explain how their actions support Wikiversity. If you cannot get satisfaction from discussion with the custodian, you can place comments, suggestions, complaints or questions at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]]. Try to resolve all custodian problems by discussion.
Custodians can lose their status for [[wikt:egregious|egregious]] violations of policies. Loss of custodianship involves a process that establishes community consensus. If a specific complaint is not resolved at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]] then a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|Community Review]] can be initiated to establish if there is community consensus in support for the custodianship of the custodian who is the subject of the unresolved complaint. At the end of the review, Wikiversity bureaucrats will review the discussion. If a bureaucrat decides that there is good reason for removal of a custodianship, that bureaucrat will go to the meta-wiki and [[m:Requests for permissions|request]] that stewards review the community discussion. If a steward agrees that the Wikiversity community has reached consensus about a problem custodian, then that steward can terminate the custodianship of the custodian.
If you have a question about an action of a probationary custodian, you should consult their mentor(s). Actions of a probationary custodian are the responsibility of their mentor(s) during their probationary period. Partially depending on agreements made in the probationary candidacy, and with respect for the 48 hour period to find a new mentor, a request to remove custodianship for a probationary custodian may often be made at Meta by any mentor or bureaucrat without need for community consensus. The local process to remove custodianship should only need to be used as a last resort, because of this alternative option.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/N}}
* Custodianship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for custodianship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, custodians have no more power or weight than other users.
* Custodians should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Steward requests/Permissions|steward will be asked to remove the rights]].<ref>See also a decision made in [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Archive/24#Reviews for Inactivity]].</ref>
== Useful reads for custodians ==
{{Wikiversity organization}}
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
*[[Special:ListUsers/sysop|List of current Wikiversity custodians and bureaucrats]]
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
*[[Wikiversity:History of Wikiversity/Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
*[[Special:ListGroupRights]]
*[[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action/Archive/24#Reviews_for_Inactivity]] (Inactivity policy for Wikiversity Custodians)
{{Official policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship| ]]
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{{pp-protected|small=yes}}
{{Policy|WV:CUST}}
[[File:Wikiversity Administrator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Custodians''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They are experienced and trusted users who can [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages, [[#Deletion and restoration of pages|delete]] and restore pages, and [[#User blocks|block]] or unblock users from editing. Custodians are the Wikiversity equivalent of administrators (also known as sysops, bibliotecarios (librarians), and moderators).
The English Wikiversity currently has {{NUMBEROFADMINS}} custodian{{PLURAL:{{NUMBEROFADMINS}}||s}} ([[Special:ListUsers/sysop|full list]]).
{{center top}}'''[[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|Request assistance]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Support staff#Support staff directory|List of custodians]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Requests for custodianship]]'''{{center bottom}}
== How does one become a custodian? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can custodians do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a custodian. If you have a good editing record then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of custodianship. If you are still interested in custodianship, here is the process it takes:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of custodian privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodians agree to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a [[w:Probation (workplace)|probationary]] custodian for a period of at least '''four weeks'''. You will have all the privileges described below. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement before the probationary period is complete, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise your mentor may [[Meta:SRP|request removal of custodian privileges]] after 48 hours, without any further notice or community discussion.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | III
|
<div id="Evaluation">
;Evaluation
</div>
Your mentor will submit a request for comments at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]] for a period of at least '''seven days''' when you are ready. During that period Wikiversity participants can evaluate how well the custodian privileges are used and how you conducted yourself at Wikiversity.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | IV
|
<div id="Custodianship">
;Custodianship
</div>
After one week of evaluation, a bureaucrat will make the final decision based on the arguments provided in the discussion. If you are approved, you will be a [[#Notes|permanent custodian]]. If you are not approved, your probationary period may either be extended or you may request another mentorship later.
|}
== What can custodians do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/WHAT}}
=== Deletion and undeletion of pages ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/D}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]]
Custodians can delete pages including images, categories, templates, etc. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and undeletions can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]].
Custodians can also delete individual versions with the [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|RevisionDelete]] feature. This is particularly useful to remove materials that violate [[Wikiversity:Copyrights|copyrights]] or other applicable law.
Before you delete a page, read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]]. See also: [[Wikiversity:Deletion policy]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
Custodians can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian upon request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Custodians have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/$2|$2]] ([[User_talk:$2|talk]]) to last version by [[User:$1|$1]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== User blocks ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/B}}
Custodians can block users from editing by specifying a username, an IP address or range of addresses. Blocks can be temporary or permanent. Most frequently, blocking occurs in response to obvious and repeated vandalism. When blocking a user, a reason for blocking must be provided which is displayed in the [[Special:Log/block|block log]]. It is also possible to block IP addresses from creating new user accounts. See [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]].
=== Editing MediaWiki [[Wikiversity:Namespaces|namespace]] ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/MW}}
Custodians are able to edit system messages (the standard texts that are used by the MediaWiki software).
=== Import ===
Custodians have access to the [[Special:Import|Import tool]], to bring materials from Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta.Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
=== User rights ===
Custodians can determine consensus and grant or revoke the following user permissions:
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curator]]
* [[Wikiversity:Event organizers|Event organizer]]
* [[Wikiversity:IP block exemption|IP block exemption]]
* [[Wikiversity:Temporary account IP viewer|Temporary account IP viewer]]
However, custodians cannot grant or revoke custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator permissions. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] and/or [[m:Steward|steward]] permissions.
== How are custodians expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/E}}
Custodians are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
For a discussion of possible failure to act professionally, see a proposed recusal policy at [[Wikiversity:Recusal]].
==Problems with custodians==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, user block, editing MediaWiki namespace pages, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity custodian, the first thing to do is leave a message on that custodian's user discussion page. Custodians should always be able to explain how their actions support Wikiversity. If you cannot get satisfaction from discussion with the custodian, you can place comments, suggestions, complaints or questions at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]]. Try to resolve all custodian problems by discussion.
Custodians can lose their status for [[wikt:egregious|egregious]] violations of policies. Loss of custodianship involves a process that establishes community consensus. If a specific complaint is not resolved at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]] then a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|Community Review]] can be initiated to establish if there is community consensus in support for the custodianship of the custodian who is the subject of the unresolved complaint. At the end of the review, Wikiversity bureaucrats will review the discussion. If a bureaucrat decides that there is good reason for removal of a custodianship, that bureaucrat will go to the meta-wiki and [[m:Requests for permissions|request]] that stewards review the community discussion. If a steward agrees that the Wikiversity community has reached consensus about a problem custodian, then that steward can terminate the custodianship of the custodian.
If you have a question about an action of a probationary custodian, you should consult their mentor(s). Actions of a probationary custodian are the responsibility of their mentor(s) during their probationary period. Partially depending on agreements made in the probationary candidacy, and with respect for the 48 hour period to find a new mentor, a request to remove custodianship for a probationary custodian may often be made at Meta by any mentor or bureaucrat without need for community consensus. The local process to remove custodianship should only need to be used as a last resort, because of this alternative option.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/N}}
* Custodianship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for custodianship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, custodians have no more power or weight than other users.
* Custodians should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Steward requests/Permissions|steward will be asked to remove the rights]].<ref>See also a decision made in [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Archive/24#Reviews for Inactivity]].</ref>
== Useful reads for custodians ==
{{Wikiversity organization}}
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
*[[Special:ListUsers/sysop|List of current Wikiversity custodians and bureaucrats]]
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
*[[Wikiversity:History of Wikiversity/Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
*[[Special:ListGroupRights]]
*[[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action/Archive/24#Reviews_for_Inactivity]] (Inactivity policy for Wikiversity Custodians)
{{Official policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship| ]]
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{{pp-protected|small=yes}}
{{Policy|WV:CUST}}
[[File:Wikiversity Administrator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Custodians''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They are experienced and trusted users who can [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages, [[#Deletion and restoration of pages|delete]] and restore pages, and [[#User blocks|block]] or unblock users from editing. Custodians are the Wikiversity equivalent of administrators (also known as sysops, bibliotecarios (librarians), and moderators).
The English Wikiversity currently has {{NUMBEROFADMINS}} custodian{{PLURAL:{{NUMBEROFADMINS}}||s}} ([[Special:ListUsers/sysop|full list]]).
{{center top}}'''[[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|Request assistance]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Support staff#Support staff directory|List of custodians]]''' - '''[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Requests for custodianship]]'''{{center bottom}}
== How does one become a custodian? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can custodians do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a custodian. If you have a good editing record then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of custodianship. If you are still interested in custodianship, here is the process it takes:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for custodianship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of custodian privileges in accordance with established policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]]. If an experienced custodian agrees to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a [[w:Probation (workplace)|probationary]] custodian for a period of at least '''four weeks'''. You will have all the privileges described below. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement before the probationary period is complete, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise your mentor may [[Meta:SRP|request removal of custodian privileges]] after 48 hours, without any further notice or community discussion.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | III
|
<div id="Evaluation">
;Evaluation
</div>
Your mentor will submit a request for comments at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship|Candidates for Custodianship]] for a period of at least '''seven days''' when you are ready. During that period Wikiversity participants can evaluate how well the custodian privileges are used and how you conducted yourself at Wikiversity.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | IV
|
<div id="Custodianship">
;Custodianship
</div>
After one week of evaluation, a bureaucrat will make the final decision based on the arguments provided in the discussion. If you are approved, you will be a [[#Notes|permanent custodian]]. If you are not approved, your probationary period may either be extended or you may request another mentorship later.
|}
== What can custodians do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/WHAT}}
=== Deletion and undeletion of pages ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/D}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]]
Custodians can delete pages including images, categories, templates, etc. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and undeletions can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]].
Custodians can also delete individual versions with the [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|RevisionDelete]] feature. This is particularly useful to remove materials that violate [[Wikiversity:Copyrights|copyrights]] or other applicable law.
Before you delete a page, read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]]. See also: [[Wikiversity:Deletion policy]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
Custodians can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian upon request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Custodians have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/$2|$2]] ([[User_talk:$2|talk]]) to last version by [[User:$1|$1]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== User blocks ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/B}}
Custodians can block users from editing by specifying a username, an IP address or range of addresses. Blocks can be temporary or permanent. Most frequently, blocking occurs in response to obvious and repeated vandalism. When blocking a user, a reason for blocking must be provided which is displayed in the [[Special:Log/block|block log]]. It is also possible to block IP addresses from creating new user accounts. See [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]].
=== Editing MediaWiki [[Wikiversity:Namespaces|namespace]] ===
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/MW}}
Custodians are able to edit system messages (the standard texts that are used by the MediaWiki software).
=== Import ===
Custodians have access to the [[Special:Import|Import tool]], to bring materials from Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta.Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
=== User rights ===
Custodians can determine [[Wikiversity:Consensus|consensus]] and grant or revoke the following user permissions:
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|Curator]]
* [[Wikiversity:Event organizers|Event organizer]]
* [[Wikiversity:IP block exemption|IP block exemption]]
* [[Wikiversity:Temporary account IP viewer|Temporary account IP viewer]]
However, custodians cannot grant or revoke custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator permissions. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] and/or [[m:Steward|steward]] permissions.
== How are custodians expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/E}}
Custodians are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
For a discussion of possible failure to act professionally, see a proposed recusal policy at [[Wikiversity:Recusal]].
==Problems with custodians==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, user block, editing MediaWiki namespace pages, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity custodian, the first thing to do is leave a message on that custodian's user discussion page. Custodians should always be able to explain how their actions support Wikiversity. If you cannot get satisfaction from discussion with the custodian, you can place comments, suggestions, complaints or questions at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]]. Try to resolve all custodian problems by discussion.
Custodians can lose their status for [[wikt:egregious|egregious]] violations of policies. Loss of custodianship involves a process that establishes community consensus. If a specific complaint is not resolved at [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Custodian feedback]] then a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|Community Review]] can be initiated to establish if there is community consensus in support for the custodianship of the custodian who is the subject of the unresolved complaint. At the end of the review, Wikiversity bureaucrats will review the discussion. If a bureaucrat decides that there is good reason for removal of a custodianship, that bureaucrat will go to the meta-wiki and [[m:Requests for permissions|request]] that stewards review the community discussion. If a steward agrees that the Wikiversity community has reached consensus about a problem custodian, then that steward can terminate the custodianship of the custodian.
If you have a question about an action of a probationary custodian, you should consult their mentor(s). Actions of a probationary custodian are the responsibility of their mentor(s) during their probationary period. Partially depending on agreements made in the probationary candidacy, and with respect for the 48 hour period to find a new mentor, a request to remove custodianship for a probationary custodian may often be made at Meta by any mentor or bureaucrat without need for community consensus. The local process to remove custodianship should only need to be used as a last resort, because of this alternative option.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUST/N}}
* Custodianship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for custodianship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, custodians have no more power or weight than other users.
* Custodians should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Steward requests/Permissions|steward will be asked to remove the rights]].<ref>See also a decision made in [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Archive/24#Reviews for Inactivity]].</ref>
== Useful reads for custodians ==
{{Wikiversity organization}}
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
*[[Special:ListUsers/sysop|List of current Wikiversity custodians and bureaucrats]]
*[[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
*[[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
*[[Wikiversity:History of Wikiversity/Custodianship]]
*[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
*[[Special:ListGroupRights]]
*[[Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action/Archive/24#Reviews_for_Inactivity]] (Inactivity policy for Wikiversity Custodians)
{{Official policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship| ]]
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Wikiversity talk:Candidates for Custodianship
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Please see [[/Archive 0]] for prior discussions.
__TOC__
== Section headers ==
It is probably a good idea to avoid links in section headers. On some mobile devices the sections are collapsed and clicking on the header opens the section. If the header is a link it will open the subpage. This makes navigation difficult. To avoid this the suggested format is to include something like this at the top of a subpage nomination:
<pre><nowiki>=== User:Test dummy ===
'''{{User|Test dummy}}'''</nowiki></pre>
Which produces:
=== User:Test dummy ===
'''{{User|Test dummy}}'''
--[[User:Mu301|mikeu]] <sup>[[User talk:Mu301|talk]]</sup> 19:57, 7 January 2018 (UTC)
== Interface Administrators ==
Discussion at [[Wikiversity talk:Interface administrators]]. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 14:26, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
== New titles for user right nominations ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved to [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#New titles for user right nominations]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 23:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)''</div>
== Rename ==
I would rename this page since, there are request for various role, but I am not sure how it could be named. Any thoughts? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:22, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
:What ideas do you have for this renaming? Just looking around is a bit confusing as well. I think there ought to be a proper tree like structure to guide users to these kinds of pages. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 21:05, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
:See also [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#New titles for user right nominations]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:03, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
== Archive requests ==
I propose to link to [[:Category:Nominations for Custodianship]] instead to subpages of a curent page. I have mooved nominations to other locations based on the agreement in [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#New titles for user right nominations|Colloquium]], but I left the redirects thinking, that such a crucial page needs a visible history. Or do you think we can delete redirects? What I mean for example [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Abd (Bureaucrat)]] redirects to [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Abd]]. Ping @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:11, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
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Wikiversity:Service community
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{{Administering Wikiversity}}
'''The role of service activities in Wikiversity'''
This page focuses on services that Wikiversity can provide to the larger Wikimedia community.
Wikiversity exists within the [[Wikimedia]] family of projects that is dominated by Wikipedia but which includes other projects such as Wikibooks and Wikinews. Wikiversity strives to provide useful services to WikiMedia sister projects. A continual problem facing Wikipedia, Wikibooks, and Wikinews is finding good sources to cite.
Wikiversity is a center for scholarship in finding and critically evaluating sources. Wikiversity encourages its participants to take part in Learning Projects that support the improvement of Wikimedia sister projects by finding and evaluating sources and providing verifiable references for Wikipedia and Wikinews articles and Wikibooks textbook modules.
==See also==
*[[MediaWiki Project]]
*[[Wikipedia service-learning courses]]
*[[Wikiversity and Wikibooks services]]
*[[Wikiversity and Wikipedia services]]
*[[Wikiversity:Service]] - Wikiversity service projects beyond Wikimedia
*[[Meta-Wiki]]
*[[Wikimedia]]
== External links ==
* [http://wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks]: developing and disseminating textbooks
* [http://collaboration.wikia.com/wiki/Wikiversity The relationship between Wikiversity and Wikibooks]
[[Category:Wikiversity]]
[[Category:Pages moved from Meta]]
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School:Journalism
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[[Image:Anders Zorn - Emma Zorn läsande.jpg|thumb|400px|Emma Zorn reading a newspaper.]]
The Wikiversity School of Journalism is looking to offer study courses people can follow to learn the ethics, theories and techniques of journalism.
We strongly encourage practical alignment with [[n:Wikinews|Wikinews]], such as it being a venue for assignment work.
If you have knowledge or a skill that can be taught here, please start a course page and list it below.
==Courses==
;Under development
* [[Draft:Journalism|Journalism]]
* [[Video journalism]]
* [[Tips for journalistic writing]]
* [[History of journalism]]
* [[New journalism]]
* [[Journalism on Wikinews]]
* [[Blogging]]
;Proposed
* Broadcast journalism - Radio
* Sub-editing and copyediting
* Journalistic ethics
* Court reporting
* Financial and economic journalism
* [[Journalism#Arts journalism|Arts journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Broadcast journalism|Broadcast journalism]] - Television
* [[Journalism#Business journalism|Business journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Entertainment journalism|Entertainment journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Fashion journalism|Fashion journalism]]
* [[Journalism#International journalism|International journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Investigative journalism|Investigative journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Local journalism|Local journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Medical journalism|Medical journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Music journalism|Music journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Political journalism|Political journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Print journalism|Print journalism]] - Weekly magazine
* [[Journalism#Sports journalism|Sports journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Technology journalism|Technology journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Video-game journalism|Video-game journalism]]
* [[Journalism#War journalism|War journalism]]
==Active participants==
* Since 6 May 2014 with [[Draft:Journalism|Journalism]] a keynote ToC lecture! --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 01:53, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
* [[Video journalism]] 2 May 2017 [[User:Leighblackall|<bdi>Leighblackall</bdi>]].
==Things you can do!==
* Clean up [[Draft:Journalism]] and move it to become a subpage of a supporting main page learning project.
==See also==
;Wikibooks
* [[b:How To Run A Newspaper|How To Run A Newspaper]] - a Wikibook
;Wikinews
* [[Wikinews]] is a great place to hone your journalistic skills in a live public, neutral environment. Unlike many citizen journalism sites, Wikinews is written in the Neutral Point of View (NPOV), which means reporters there often strive for '''professionalism in reporting, with consideration for truth, fairness, balance, decency and ethics'''. There are regular reporters there, which are often credited for their work. Some Wikinews on-going projects you might be interested in include: [[n:Wikinews:Audio|Audio Wikinews]] and [[n:Wikinews:Original reporting|Original Reporting on ''Wikinews'']]
;Other
* [http://www.theopenpress.com/ The Open Press]
* [http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/RSS EPA RSS Feeds]
* [http://www.pmwatch.org/pmw/contact/media.asp Media contact information]
* [http://apps.gsa.gov/CommonSubscriptionService.php Sign up for electronic newsletters from the federal government]
* [http://www.indymedia.org/ Indymedia] -''A place to start reporting the news yourself.''
* [http://www.newsu.org/ News University] ''Free online courses on various journalism topics''
* [http://www.journalism.co.uk Journalism UK] -''Journalism news, training, events and jobs, for journalists''
;Style Guides
* [[n:WN:SG|''Wikinews''' Style guide]]
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/styleguide/ The Guardian] (newspaper)
* [http://www.economist.com/research/StyleGuide/ The Economist] (weekly)
* [http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/journalism/journalists.html Other resources] (from the University of Iowa)
[[Category:Journalism| ]]
[[Category:Wikiversity schools]]
[[pt:Portal:Jornalismo]]
[[ru:Факультет журналистики]]
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/* See also */
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[[Image:Anders Zorn - Emma Zorn läsande.jpg|thumb|400px|Emma Zorn reading a newspaper.]]
The Wikiversity School of Journalism is looking to offer study courses people can follow to learn the ethics, theories and techniques of journalism.
We strongly encourage practical alignment with [[n:Wikinews|Wikinews]], such as it being a venue for assignment work.
If you have knowledge or a skill that can be taught here, please start a course page and list it below.
==Courses==
;Under development
* [[Draft:Journalism|Journalism]]
* [[Video journalism]]
* [[Tips for journalistic writing]]
* [[History of journalism]]
* [[New journalism]]
* [[Journalism on Wikinews]]
* [[Blogging]]
;Proposed
* Broadcast journalism - Radio
* Sub-editing and copyediting
* Journalistic ethics
* Court reporting
* Financial and economic journalism
* [[Journalism#Arts journalism|Arts journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Broadcast journalism|Broadcast journalism]] - Television
* [[Journalism#Business journalism|Business journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Entertainment journalism|Entertainment journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Fashion journalism|Fashion journalism]]
* [[Journalism#International journalism|International journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Investigative journalism|Investigative journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Local journalism|Local journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Medical journalism|Medical journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Music journalism|Music journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Political journalism|Political journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Print journalism|Print journalism]] - Weekly magazine
* [[Journalism#Sports journalism|Sports journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Technology journalism|Technology journalism]]
* [[Journalism#Video-game journalism|Video-game journalism]]
* [[Journalism#War journalism|War journalism]]
==Active participants==
* Since 6 May 2014 with [[Draft:Journalism|Journalism]] a keynote ToC lecture! --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 01:53, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
* [[Video journalism]] 2 May 2017 [[User:Leighblackall|<bdi>Leighblackall</bdi>]].
==Things you can do!==
* Clean up [[Draft:Journalism]] and move it to become a subpage of a supporting main page learning project.
==See also==
;Wikibooks
: [[b:How To Run A Newspaper|How To Run A Newspaper]] - a Wikibook
;Wikinews
: [[Wikinews]] was a great place to hone your journalistic skills in a live public, neutral environment. Unlike many citizen journalism sites, Wikinews is written in the Neutral Point of View (NPOV), which means reporters there often strive for '''professionalism in reporting, with consideration for truth, fairness, balance, decency and ethics'''. There are regular reporters there, which are often credited for their work. Wikinews was closed in 2026.
;Other
: [http://www.theopenpress.com/ The Open Press]
: [http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/RSS EPA RSS Feeds]
: [http://www.pmwatch.org/pmw/contact/media.asp Media contact information]
: [http://apps.gsa.gov/CommonSubscriptionService.php Sign up for electronic newsletters from the federal government]
: [http://www.indymedia.org/ Indymedia] -''A place to start reporting the news yourself.''
: [http://www.newsu.org/ News University] ''Free online courses on various journalism topics''
: [http://www.journalism.co.uk Journalism UK] -''Journalism news, training, events and jobs, for journalists''
;Style Guides
: [[n:WN:SG|''Wikinews''' Style guide]]
: [http://www.guardian.co.uk/styleguide/ The Guardian] (newspaper)
: [http://www.economist.com/research/StyleGuide/ The Economist] (weekly)
: [http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/journalism/journalists.html Other resources] (from the University of Iowa)
[[Category:Journalism| ]]
[[Category:Wikiversity schools]]
[[pt:Portal:Jornalismo]]
[[ru:Факультет журналистики]]
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Wikiversity talk:Sandbox
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{{Talk header}}
== There should be people watching the sandbox ==
Dave and I have been watching the Sandbox constantly, is anyone else interested in volunteering? --[[User:Goldenburg111|Goldenburg111]] ([[User talk:Goldenburg111|talk]]) 15:22, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
:Yes I will, but what do I have to do? --[[Special:Contributions/71.235.232.65|71.235.232.65]] ([[User talk:71.235.232.65|discuss]]) 21:44, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
::Cleanup the sandbox by reverting cleanup edits! --~~{{font|face=Utah MT-SJ-NI|[[User:Goldenburg111|{{font|color=red|Golden}}]]<sub>[[User talk:Goldenburg111|{{font|color=orange|burg}}]][[Special:Contributions/Goldenburg111|111]]</sub>}} 21:46, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
:::Yes, it just needs to be reset occasionally, but not over-zealously. In particular, don't reset it if a user has been editing within the last hour or so. They may still be testing something. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 23:46, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
:Keep up the good work. --[[User:Rockchalk 03|Rockchalk 03]] ([[User talk:Rockchalk 03|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Rockchalk 03|contribs]]) 12:20, 31 July 2014 (UTC)
:Maybe, but it is really necessary? I can see in the page history that a robot is running sometimes ("Robot: Automatically cleaned"). If it was written in the information box when it was running (for example at a specified day and time every week), then nobody should be surprised if what they have written, will disappear. /[[User:PatrikN|Patrik Näsfors]] ([[User talk:PatrikN|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PatrikN|contribs]]) 19:05, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
::I clean it when what is already there might discourage another editor from testing their own edits. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 19:13, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
:::Sorry Dave if I don't understand your answer (so clarify if you like), but if it is reset often enough, I can't see why it should be necessary to watch and do it manually. At [http://www.opensourcecms.com/scripts/details.php?scriptid=153&name=MediaWiki OpenSourceCMS] (where you also can try a demo of MediaWiki, which the link points to), demos are deleted and re-installed every hour. I don't know how much a bot can be programmed to do, but as you stated above, it could be fine if the bot could see if there is more than an hour since the last edit before purging the page. Could that be done? It's just a suggestion so people don't have to check and clean manually like now. /[[User:PatrikN|Patrik Näsfors]] ([[User talk:PatrikN|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PatrikN|contribs]]) 20:34, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
::::It isn't reset often enough. The bot that is active here only resets the sandbox on Saturday mornings. It's certainly possible to write a bot to do this. I don't run mine unattended, but I'd be happy to help someone else learn how to write the code to do this if they're interested. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:58, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for the clarification. I'd be happy to help with that. I also have a server running continuously if that's a requirement. I haven't learned to program in Python yet, but it's on my to-learn list and I'd like to learn what else is necessary. (I'm also a quick learner). But actually it seems the [[User:Mu301Bot|Mu301Bot]] does not run anything at the moment (and the task to clean the Sandbox have been inactive since July 2016).
:::::I can also see why it's necessary to do it manually once in a while, because the page is totally changed sometimes. That raises another question. Is it possible to protect a section at the top (the header) and prevent that it is modified, or can only whole pages be protected? Or might a solution be to create subpages for sandboxing? /[[User:PatrikN|Patrik Näsfors]] ([[User talk:PatrikN|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PatrikN|contribs]]) 22:40, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
::::::I'm a bit biased, but there's a good Python course at [[Python Programming]]. There's sample bot code at [[MediaWiki API/Pywikibot]]. The [[Pywikibot]] course is very outdated, but the instructions at [[mw:Manual:Pywikibot]] were good the last time I tried them (maybe six months ago). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 00:28, 13 October 2016 (UTC)
== Education ==
I would like to find out more information about free learning resources on the internet that once completed and I pass the course I would earn a free certificate showing my accomplishments. [[User:ChrisREdG33|ChrisREdG33]] ([[User talk:ChrisREdG33|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ChrisREdG33|contribs]]) 20:48, 20 July 2018 (UTC)
:{{At|ChrisREdG33}} In most cases, free certificates are worth what you pay for them. Free learning is great. Free proof of learning doesn't go very far. I encourage you to look at your goals and determine what proof of education is necessary for those goals. If it is a portfolio, create your own proof of experience. If certification is required, you'll likely need to pay for that testing or proof. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 13:07, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
== Science ==
I think we should a develop scientific project [[User:Umeh elochukwu|Umeh elochukwu]] ([[User talk:Umeh elochukwu|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Umeh elochukwu|contribs]]) 13:59, 8 November 2020 (UTC)
We should try making a drone
[[User:Umeh elochukwu|Umeh elochukwu]] ([[User talk:Umeh elochukwu|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Umeh elochukwu|contribs]]) 14:01, 8 November 2020 (UTC)
== love,live, and let go ==
I just wanted to see if anyone is actually interested in conversation on this choice of a topic that I chose. If you are interested then please say so and I will begin. [[User:Ronniewaddle79|Ronniewaddle79]] ([[User talk:Ronniewaddle79|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ronniewaddle79|contribs]]) 21:14, 15 November 2023 (UTC)
:I am interested , please proceed @[[User:Ronniewaddle79|Ronniewaddle79]] [[User:Luminary77|Sierra Seven]] ([[User talk:Luminary77|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Luminary77|contribs]]) 13:17, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
::Me too!@[[User:Ronniewaddle79|Ronniewaddle79]] [[Special:Contributions/~2026-27795-53|~2026-27795-53]] ([[User talk:~2026-27795-53|talk]]) 09:09, 8 May 2026 (UTC)
== Insta360 Discount Code INRSG9HITPA – Best Coupon Code & Referral Code Guide for Maximum Savings ==
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== My Personal Experience Using the Code ==
When I placed my order, I almost completed the purchase without checking for a code. After a quick search, I found '''INRSG9HITPA''', tested it at checkout, and it applied depending on the ongoing promotion.
This small step made the buying experience feel more optimized, especially since I was also adding accessories to my order.
----
== Final Thoughts ==
If you are buying from [https://www.insta360.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com Insta360], it is always worth testing a '''discount code / coupon code / referral code''' before paying.
Try this code at checkout:
'''INRSG9HITPA'''
A simple check can sometimes help you get better value on your Insta360 purchase without any extra effort. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28853-79|~2026-28853-79]] ([[User talk:~2026-28853-79|talk]]) 12:56, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
gwx3mqsizoayth8mg2ef7t2i0mijk3u
2808870
2808868
2026-05-13T13:05:14Z
Atcovi
276019
Reverted edit by [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28853-79|~2026-28853-79]] ([[User_talk:~2026-28853-79|talk]]) to last version by [[User:~2026-27795-53|~2026-27795-53]] using [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]]
2807905
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Talk header}}
== There should be people watching the sandbox ==
Dave and I have been watching the Sandbox constantly, is anyone else interested in volunteering? --[[User:Goldenburg111|Goldenburg111]] ([[User talk:Goldenburg111|talk]]) 15:22, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
:Yes I will, but what do I have to do? --[[Special:Contributions/71.235.232.65|71.235.232.65]] ([[User talk:71.235.232.65|discuss]]) 21:44, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
::Cleanup the sandbox by reverting cleanup edits! --~~{{font|face=Utah MT-SJ-NI|[[User:Goldenburg111|{{font|color=red|Golden}}]]<sub>[[User talk:Goldenburg111|{{font|color=orange|burg}}]][[Special:Contributions/Goldenburg111|111]]</sub>}} 21:46, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
:::Yes, it just needs to be reset occasionally, but not over-zealously. In particular, don't reset it if a user has been editing within the last hour or so. They may still be testing something. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 23:46, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
:Keep up the good work. --[[User:Rockchalk 03|Rockchalk 03]] ([[User talk:Rockchalk 03|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Rockchalk 03|contribs]]) 12:20, 31 July 2014 (UTC)
:Maybe, but it is really necessary? I can see in the page history that a robot is running sometimes ("Robot: Automatically cleaned"). If it was written in the information box when it was running (for example at a specified day and time every week), then nobody should be surprised if what they have written, will disappear. /[[User:PatrikN|Patrik Näsfors]] ([[User talk:PatrikN|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PatrikN|contribs]]) 19:05, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
::I clean it when what is already there might discourage another editor from testing their own edits. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 19:13, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
:::Sorry Dave if I don't understand your answer (so clarify if you like), but if it is reset often enough, I can't see why it should be necessary to watch and do it manually. At [http://www.opensourcecms.com/scripts/details.php?scriptid=153&name=MediaWiki OpenSourceCMS] (where you also can try a demo of MediaWiki, which the link points to), demos are deleted and re-installed every hour. I don't know how much a bot can be programmed to do, but as you stated above, it could be fine if the bot could see if there is more than an hour since the last edit before purging the page. Could that be done? It's just a suggestion so people don't have to check and clean manually like now. /[[User:PatrikN|Patrik Näsfors]] ([[User talk:PatrikN|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PatrikN|contribs]]) 20:34, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
::::It isn't reset often enough. The bot that is active here only resets the sandbox on Saturday mornings. It's certainly possible to write a bot to do this. I don't run mine unattended, but I'd be happy to help someone else learn how to write the code to do this if they're interested. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 20:58, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for the clarification. I'd be happy to help with that. I also have a server running continuously if that's a requirement. I haven't learned to program in Python yet, but it's on my to-learn list and I'd like to learn what else is necessary. (I'm also a quick learner). But actually it seems the [[User:Mu301Bot|Mu301Bot]] does not run anything at the moment (and the task to clean the Sandbox have been inactive since July 2016).
:::::I can also see why it's necessary to do it manually once in a while, because the page is totally changed sometimes. That raises another question. Is it possible to protect a section at the top (the header) and prevent that it is modified, or can only whole pages be protected? Or might a solution be to create subpages for sandboxing? /[[User:PatrikN|Patrik Näsfors]] ([[User talk:PatrikN|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PatrikN|contribs]]) 22:40, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
::::::I'm a bit biased, but there's a good Python course at [[Python Programming]]. There's sample bot code at [[MediaWiki API/Pywikibot]]. The [[Pywikibot]] course is very outdated, but the instructions at [[mw:Manual:Pywikibot]] were good the last time I tried them (maybe six months ago). -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 00:28, 13 October 2016 (UTC)
== Education ==
I would like to find out more information about free learning resources on the internet that once completed and I pass the course I would earn a free certificate showing my accomplishments. [[User:ChrisREdG33|ChrisREdG33]] ([[User talk:ChrisREdG33|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ChrisREdG33|contribs]]) 20:48, 20 July 2018 (UTC)
:{{At|ChrisREdG33}} In most cases, free certificates are worth what you pay for them. Free learning is great. Free proof of learning doesn't go very far. I encourage you to look at your goals and determine what proof of education is necessary for those goals. If it is a portfolio, create your own proof of experience. If certification is required, you'll likely need to pay for that testing or proof. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 13:07, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
== Science ==
I think we should a develop scientific project [[User:Umeh elochukwu|Umeh elochukwu]] ([[User talk:Umeh elochukwu|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Umeh elochukwu|contribs]]) 13:59, 8 November 2020 (UTC)
We should try making a drone
[[User:Umeh elochukwu|Umeh elochukwu]] ([[User talk:Umeh elochukwu|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Umeh elochukwu|contribs]]) 14:01, 8 November 2020 (UTC)
== love,live, and let go ==
I just wanted to see if anyone is actually interested in conversation on this choice of a topic that I chose. If you are interested then please say so and I will begin. [[User:Ronniewaddle79|Ronniewaddle79]] ([[User talk:Ronniewaddle79|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ronniewaddle79|contribs]]) 21:14, 15 November 2023 (UTC)
:I am interested , please proceed @[[User:Ronniewaddle79|Ronniewaddle79]] [[User:Luminary77|Sierra Seven]] ([[User talk:Luminary77|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Luminary77|contribs]]) 13:17, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
::Me too!@[[User:Ronniewaddle79|Ronniewaddle79]] [[Special:Contributions/~2026-27795-53|~2026-27795-53]] ([[User talk:~2026-27795-53|talk]]) 09:09, 8 May 2026 (UTC)
cuebt21judl9so6bv38t8qdc3k8c6v5
Wikiversity:Bureaucratship
4
10320
2808959
2808534
2026-05-13T22:12:16Z
Jtneill
10242
/* A bureaucrat's duties */ add curator to list of rights that a bureaucrat can remove
2808959
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{proposal|WV:B|WV:BUR|WV:CRAT|WV:BCRAT}}
[[File:Wikiversity Bureaucrat.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Bureaucrats''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. Bureaucrats are users with the ability to promote other users to [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] or bureaucrat status, and grant or revoke [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]] status and [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] status.
== A bureaucrat's role ==
First and foremost, bureaucrats must be well-trusted members of the community. They must have a deep understanding of [[Wikiversity:Mission|Wikiversity's mission]] and processes, and must be excellent judges of [[Wikiversity:Consensus|consensus]]. They must demonstrate through their extensive contributions to Wikiversity that they are not rash in decision-making, nor uncivil to others, even those whom they are in disagreement with. They must also have the ability and willingness to thoroughly explain decisions that they make, as well as to admit fault, where appropriate.
Bureaucrats ''do not'' have the right to use their status to appropriate any undue influence in community discussions - their participation in such activities is on a par with any other community member, insofar as is possible. Whatever influence they may have should be akin to that of any other community member, according to the weight of their opinions or their previous participation in the project.
Bureaucrats are expected to follow the same policies as [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators]] and [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodians]].
== A bureaucrat's duties ==
Bureaucrats can expand the set of ''groups'' that a user belongs to by adding a user to the ''bot'', ''interface administrator'', ''curator'', ''custodian'', or ''bureaucrat'' group (via [[Special:UserRights]] - [[Special:Log/rights]]). Bureaucrats act as the final interpreter of consensus with respect to candidacies for user group changes. Bureaucrats are charged with the responsibility of declaring at an appropriate time, whether a [[Wikiversity:Curator|curator]], [[WV:CC|custodian]], bureaucrat, [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]], or [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] candidate is granted a user group change or otherwise. Bureaucrats should respect the Wikiversity community's decision on these particular matters. This management process is intended to streamline processing of requests for user group changes, and to minimize ambiguity introduced to the process when non-bureaucrats intervene.
Bureaucrats should be careful about making mistakes in adding user rights because only curator, bot, and interface administrator groups can be removed by bureaucrats. To remove custodian or bureaucrat rights requires a [[m:Stewards|steward]] to do so.
== How can I question a bureaucrat's decision? ==
You can ask on a bureaucrat's [[Help:User talk page|user talk page]], request [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|feedback]] from other custodians and bureaucrats, or start a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The order is important, it reflects the order in which you should attempt to resolve a problem.
== How are bureaucrats created? ==
Bureaucrats can be nominated at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]. However, no mentor is required. Nominations should be [[Wikiversity:Announcements|announced]] ([[MediaWiki:Sitenotice|site wide]]), and kept open for a period of '''at least two weeks''' before being acted upon. There needs to be '''a very strong majority''' of users in support of the decision to add or remove a candidate from the ''bureaucrat'' group.
== How are bureaucrats removed? ==
There are three ways:
# A bureaucrat can request removal of their tools from [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards]].
# Requests for bureaucrat removal by others (unless it's an emergency) should first go through the process of talk page discussion, [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|custodian feedback request]], and [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The final act would be a [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|request to stewards]] to remove the ''bureaucrat'' group from a user.
# The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Stewards|steward]] will remove the rights.
==See also==
;Wikiversity
* [[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:Curators]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Special:ListUsers/bureaucrat|List of current Wikiversity bureaucrats]]
* [[Wikiversity:Colloquium/archives/December 2006#Bureaucrats]]
;Sister wikis
* [[w:Wikipedia:Bureaucrats|Wikipedia:Bureaucrats]]
* [[meta:Bureaucrat|Meta:Bureaucrat]]
* [[b:Wikibooks:Administrators|Wikibooks:Administrators]]
* [[wikinews:Wikinews:Administrators|Wikinews:Administrators]]
{{Official policies}}
{{Proposed policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity bureaucratship| ]]
[[de:Wikiversity:Pedelle#Bürokraten]]
e79mawo0tc8vtixit7a5w6jtdhityjv
2808960
2808959
2026-05-13T22:12:49Z
Jtneill
10242
/* See also */
2808960
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{proposal|WV:B|WV:BUR|WV:CRAT|WV:BCRAT}}
[[File:Wikiversity Bureaucrat.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Bureaucrats''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. Bureaucrats are users with the ability to promote other users to [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] or bureaucrat status, and grant or revoke [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]] status and [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] status.
== A bureaucrat's role ==
First and foremost, bureaucrats must be well-trusted members of the community. They must have a deep understanding of [[Wikiversity:Mission|Wikiversity's mission]] and processes, and must be excellent judges of [[Wikiversity:Consensus|consensus]]. They must demonstrate through their extensive contributions to Wikiversity that they are not rash in decision-making, nor uncivil to others, even those whom they are in disagreement with. They must also have the ability and willingness to thoroughly explain decisions that they make, as well as to admit fault, where appropriate.
Bureaucrats ''do not'' have the right to use their status to appropriate any undue influence in community discussions - their participation in such activities is on a par with any other community member, insofar as is possible. Whatever influence they may have should be akin to that of any other community member, according to the weight of their opinions or their previous participation in the project.
Bureaucrats are expected to follow the same policies as [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators]] and [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodians]].
== A bureaucrat's duties ==
Bureaucrats can expand the set of ''groups'' that a user belongs to by adding a user to the ''bot'', ''interface administrator'', ''curator'', ''custodian'', or ''bureaucrat'' group (via [[Special:UserRights]] - [[Special:Log/rights]]). Bureaucrats act as the final interpreter of consensus with respect to candidacies for user group changes. Bureaucrats are charged with the responsibility of declaring at an appropriate time, whether a [[Wikiversity:Curator|curator]], [[WV:CC|custodian]], bureaucrat, [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]], or [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] candidate is granted a user group change or otherwise. Bureaucrats should respect the Wikiversity community's decision on these particular matters. This management process is intended to streamline processing of requests for user group changes, and to minimize ambiguity introduced to the process when non-bureaucrats intervene.
Bureaucrats should be careful about making mistakes in adding user rights because only curator, bot, and interface administrator groups can be removed by bureaucrats. To remove custodian or bureaucrat rights requires a [[m:Stewards|steward]] to do so.
== How can I question a bureaucrat's decision? ==
You can ask on a bureaucrat's [[Help:User talk page|user talk page]], request [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|feedback]] from other custodians and bureaucrats, or start a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The order is important, it reflects the order in which you should attempt to resolve a problem.
== How are bureaucrats created? ==
Bureaucrats can be nominated at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]. However, no mentor is required. Nominations should be [[Wikiversity:Announcements|announced]] ([[MediaWiki:Sitenotice|site wide]]), and kept open for a period of '''at least two weeks''' before being acted upon. There needs to be '''a very strong majority''' of users in support of the decision to add or remove a candidate from the ''bureaucrat'' group.
== How are bureaucrats removed? ==
There are three ways:
# A bureaucrat can request removal of their tools from [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards]].
# Requests for bureaucrat removal by others (unless it's an emergency) should first go through the process of talk page discussion, [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|custodian feedback request]], and [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The final act would be a [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|request to stewards]] to remove the ''bureaucrat'' group from a user.
# The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Stewards|steward]] will remove the rights.
==See also==
;Wikiversity
* [[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Special:ListUsers/bureaucrat|List of current Wikiversity bureaucrats]]
* [[Wikiversity:Colloquium/archives/December 2006#Bureaucrats]]
;Sister wikis
* [[w:Wikipedia:Bureaucrats|Wikipedia:Bureaucrats]]
* [[meta:Bureaucrat|Meta:Bureaucrat]]
* [[b:Wikibooks:Administrators|Wikibooks:Administrators]]
* [[wikinews:Wikinews:Administrators|Wikinews:Administrators]]
{{Official policies}}
{{Proposed policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity bureaucratship| ]]
[[de:Wikiversity:Pedelle#Bürokraten]]
lzlgb43s102dz1law07qeeop20x6ruu
2808964
2808960
2026-05-13T22:31:13Z
Jtneill
10242
/* A bureaucrat's duties */ Make order of user rights consistent. Clarify that custodians can also close curator requests and add those permissions.
2808964
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{proposal|WV:B|WV:BUR|WV:CRAT|WV:BCRAT}}
[[File:Wikiversity Bureaucrat.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Bureaucrats''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. Bureaucrats are users with the ability to promote other users to [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] or bureaucrat status, and grant or revoke [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]] status and [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] status.
== A bureaucrat's role ==
First and foremost, bureaucrats must be well-trusted members of the community. They must have a deep understanding of [[Wikiversity:Mission|Wikiversity's mission]] and processes, and must be excellent judges of [[Wikiversity:Consensus|consensus]]. They must demonstrate through their extensive contributions to Wikiversity that they are not rash in decision-making, nor uncivil to others, even those whom they are in disagreement with. They must also have the ability and willingness to thoroughly explain decisions that they make, as well as to admit fault, where appropriate.
Bureaucrats ''do not'' have the right to use their status to appropriate any undue influence in community discussions - their participation in such activities is on a par with any other community member, insofar as is possible. Whatever influence they may have should be akin to that of any other community member, according to the weight of their opinions or their previous participation in the project.
Bureaucrats are expected to follow the same policies as [[Wikiversity:Curators|curators]] and [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodians]].
== A bureaucrat's duties ==
Bureaucrats can add users to the [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curator]], [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]], [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]], [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]], and/or [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] groups (via [[Special:UserRights]] - [[Special:Log/rights]]). Bureaucrats act as the final interpreter of consensus and are charged with the responsibility of declaring at an appropriate time, whether a custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator candidate is granted a user group change or otherwise. Bureaucrats should respect the Wikiversity community's decision on these particular matters. This management process is intended to streamline processing of requests for user group changes, and to minimize ambiguity introduced to the process when non-bureaucrats intervene. However, note that custodians can determine consensus and add user group permissions for curator requests.
Bureaucrats should be careful about making mistakes in adding user rights because only curator, bot, and interface administrator groups can be removed by bureaucrats. To remove custodian or bureaucrat rights requires a [[m:Stewards|steward]] to do so.
== How can I question a bureaucrat's decision? ==
You can ask on a bureaucrat's [[Help:User talk page|user talk page]], request [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|feedback]] from other custodians and bureaucrats, or start a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The order is important, it reflects the order in which you should attempt to resolve a problem.
== How are bureaucrats created? ==
Bureaucrats can be nominated at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]. However, no mentor is required. Nominations should be [[Wikiversity:Announcements|announced]] ([[MediaWiki:Sitenotice|site wide]]), and kept open for a period of '''at least two weeks''' before being acted upon. There needs to be '''a very strong majority''' of users in support of the decision to add or remove a candidate from the ''bureaucrat'' group.
== How are bureaucrats removed? ==
There are three ways:
# A bureaucrat can request removal of their tools from [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards]].
# Requests for bureaucrat removal by others (unless it's an emergency) should first go through the process of talk page discussion, [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|custodian feedback request]], and [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The final act would be a [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|request to stewards]] to remove the ''bureaucrat'' group from a user.
# The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Stewards|steward]] will remove the rights.
==See also==
;Wikiversity
* [[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Special:ListUsers/bureaucrat|List of current Wikiversity bureaucrats]]
* [[Wikiversity:Colloquium/archives/December 2006#Bureaucrats]]
;Sister wikis
* [[w:Wikipedia:Bureaucrats|Wikipedia:Bureaucrats]]
* [[meta:Bureaucrat|Meta:Bureaucrat]]
* [[b:Wikibooks:Administrators|Wikibooks:Administrators]]
* [[wikinews:Wikinews:Administrators|Wikinews:Administrators]]
{{Official policies}}
{{Proposed policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity bureaucratship| ]]
[[de:Wikiversity:Pedelle#Bürokraten]]
s5bwf1kijl8567oygwzexqfrgjyomkr
2808965
2808964
2026-05-13T22:37:05Z
Jtneill
10242
Improve 1st sentence to include adding and revoking curator permissions
2808965
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{proposal|WV:B|WV:BUR|WV:CRAT|WV:BCRAT}}
[[File:Wikiversity Bureaucrat.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Bureaucrats''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They can promote users to [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] or bureaucrat status, and grant or revoke [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curator]], [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]], and [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] permissions.
== A bureaucrat's role ==
First and foremost, bureaucrats must be well-trusted members of the community. They must have a deep understanding of [[Wikiversity:Mission|Wikiversity's mission]] and processes, and must be excellent judges of [[Wikiversity:Consensus|consensus]]. They must demonstrate through their extensive contributions to Wikiversity that they are not rash in decision-making, nor uncivil to others, even those whom they are in disagreement with. They must also have the ability and willingness to thoroughly explain decisions that they make, as well as to admit fault, where appropriate.
Bureaucrats ''do not'' have the right to use their status to appropriate any undue influence in community discussions - their participation in such activities is on a par with any other community member, insofar as is possible. Whatever influence they may have should be akin to that of any other community member, according to the weight of their opinions or their previous participation in the project.
Bureaucrats are expected to follow the same policies as [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curators]] and [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodians]].
== A bureaucrat's duties ==
Bureaucrats can add users to the [[Wikiversity:Curatorship|curator]], [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]], bureaucrat, [[Wikiversity:Bots|bot]], and/or [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators|interface administrator]] groups (via [[Special:UserRights]] - [[Special:Log/rights]]). Bureaucrats act as the final interpreter of consensus and are charged with the responsibility of declaring at an appropriate time, whether a custodian, bureaucrat, bot, or interface administrator candidate is granted a user group change or otherwise. Bureaucrats should respect the Wikiversity community's decision on these particular matters. This management process is intended to streamline processing of requests for user group changes, and to minimize ambiguity introduced to the process when non-bureaucrats intervene. However, note that custodians can determine consensus and add user group permissions for curator requests.
Bureaucrats should be careful about making mistakes in adding user rights because only curator, bot, and interface administrator groups can be removed by bureaucrats. To remove custodian or bureaucrat rights requires a [[m:Stewards|steward]] to do so.
== How can I question a bureaucrat's decision? ==
You can ask on a bureaucrat's [[Help:User talk page|user talk page]], request [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|feedback]] from other custodians and bureaucrats, or start a [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The order is important, it reflects the order in which you should attempt to resolve a problem.
== How are bureaucrats created? ==
Bureaucrats can be nominated at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship]]. However, no mentor is required. Nominations should be [[Wikiversity:Announcements|announced]] ([[MediaWiki:Sitenotice|site wide]]), and kept open for a period of '''at least two weeks''' before being acted upon. There needs to be '''a very strong majority''' of users in support of the decision to add or remove a candidate from the ''bureaucrat'' group.
== How are bureaucrats removed? ==
There are three ways:
# A bureaucrat can request removal of their tools from [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards]].
# Requests for bureaucrat removal by others (unless it's an emergency) should first go through the process of talk page discussion, [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|custodian feedback request]], and [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]]. The final act would be a [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|request to stewards]] to remove the ''bureaucrat'' group from a user.
# The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for holders of advanced administrative rights is two years per the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]]. After that time, a [[meta:Stewards|steward]] will remove the rights.
==See also==
;Wikiversity
* [[Wikiversity:CheckUser policy]]
* [[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Special:ListUsers/bureaucrat|List of current Wikiversity bureaucrats]]
* [[Wikiversity:Colloquium/archives/December 2006#Bureaucrats]]
;Sister wikis
* [[w:Wikipedia:Bureaucrats|Wikipedia:Bureaucrats]]
* [[meta:Bureaucrat|Meta:Bureaucrat]]
* [[b:Wikibooks:Administrators|Wikibooks:Administrators]]
* [[wikinews:Wikinews:Administrators|Wikinews:Administrators]]
{{Official policies}}
{{Proposed policies}}
[[Category:Wikiversity bureaucratship| ]]
[[de:Wikiversity:Pedelle#Bürokraten]]
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Portal:Urban studies and planning
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{{RightTOC}}
Welcome to Wikiversity's School of Urban Studies and Planning!
This is a developing school. There is an attempt to form a framework on this page to assist in the organization of content.
Wikiversity's Department of Urban Studies and Planning is part of the Faculty of [[Portal:Social_Sciences|Social Sciences]].
== School News ==
* '''Right now''' - Looking for contributors.
* '''August 19, 2009''' - Ahwahnee Principles added to the curriculum!
* '''December 23 2006''' - School founded.
== Learning projects ==
* NYC (Bushwick) Urban Renewal project
== Courses ==
These need to have their namespace changed to nothing. "Topic:" is not appropriate for courses. Departments and divisions should have the namespace "Topic:".
{{Col}}
*100 Level Courses
** URBN 100 [[Urban studies|Introduction to Urban Studies and Planning]]
** URBN 101 [[Survey & Analysis]]
** URBN 102 [[Civil Engineering for Planners]]
** URBN 103 [[Planning Design]]
*200 Level Courses
** URBN 200 [[Geographic information system|Introduction to GIS]]
** URBN 201 [[Urban Renewal]]
** URBN 202 [[Rural issues|Rural Issues]]
** URBN 203 [[Resource management|Resource Management]]
** URBN 204 [[Land Use Applications]]
* 300 Level Courses
** URBN 300 [[Urban policy|Urban Policy]]
** URBN 301 [[Urban community|Urban community]]
** URBN 302 [[Land use and development|Land Use and Development]]
** URBN 303 [[Environmental policy|Environmental Policy]]
** URBN 304 [[Poverty and urban planning|Poverty and Urban Planning]]
** URBN 305 [[Great cities|Los Angeles, New York, and Dubai]]
** URBN 306 [[Urban studies and architecture|Theories of Architecture in Urban Planning]]
** URBN 307 [[Urban and regional economies|Urban and Regional Economies]]
** URBN 308 [[Research methods in Urban Planning|Urban Planning Research Methods]]
** URBN 309 [[Politics of urbanization|Politics of Urbanization]]
** URBN 310 [[Urban planning of natural resources|Natural Resources]]
** URBN 311 [[History of urban planning|History of Urban Planning]]
** URBN 313 [[Landscape planning and design|Landscape Planning and Design]]
** URBN 314 [[Topic:Urban design|Urban Design]]
** URBN 316 [[Urban housing|Urban Housing]]
** URBN 318 [[Managing the environment|Environmental Management]]
** URBN 319 [[Transportation planning|Transportation Planning]]
** URBN 320 [[Sustainable urban development|Sustainable Development]]
** URBN 321 [[Environmental politics|Environmental Politics]]
** URBN 322 [[Laws and regulations in urban planning|Urban Planning and the Law]]
** URBN 324 [[Social policy research|Research Design and Methods for Social Policy]]
** URBN 325 [[Planning economic development|Economic Development]]
** URBN 326 [[Communications in urban planning|Communications in Urban Planning]]
{{Break}}
* 400 Level Courses
** URBN 401 [[Spatial statistics|Spatial Statistics]]
** URBN 402 [[Applied economics for urban planning|Applied Economics for Urban Planning]]
** URBN 403 [[Global cities|Global Cities]]
** URBN 404 [[International perspectives and considerations for urban planning|International Planning]]
** URBN 405 [[Advanced GIS and Remote Sensing|Advanced GIS and Remote Sensing]]
** URBN 406 [[Navigating bureaucracy in urban planning|Navigating Bureaucracy in Urban Planning]]
** URBN 407 [[Advanced case studies of urban interventions|Advanced Case Studies of Urban Interventions]]
** URBN 408 [[Theories of urban architectural Design|Theories of Urban Architectural Design]]
** URBN 409 [[Public and private development|Public and Private Development]]
** URBN 410 [[Utilizing technology in urban planning|Utilizing Technology in Urban Planning]]
** URBN 411 [[Real estate finance|Real Estate Finance]]
** URBN 412 [[Real estate development processes|Real Estate Development Processes]]
** URBN 413 [[Finance administration|Finance Administration]]
** URBN 414 [[Advanced theory of urban planning|Advanced Theory in Urban Planning]]
** URBN 415 [[Urban Sociology]]
** URBN 416 [[Community Studies]]
** URBN 417 [[Environmental Studies]]
** URBN 418 [[SpatialXL]]
** URBN 419 [[Management for Planners]]
{{Col/end}}
==Topics==
*[[Portal:Transport and traffic engineering|Transportation and Traffic Engineering]]
*[[Peri-urban planning]]
*[[Real estate|Real Estate]]
==Related news==
* '''April 18, 2007''' - [http://www.physorg.com/news96112784.html The Federal Communications Commission will study the rate of broadband internet implementation in The United States...]
* '''March 19, 2007''' - [http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/03/070319111740.htm New water purification technology to be commercialized in India.]
* '''March 19, 2007''' - [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/03/19/namazon319.xml Blair plans Government 2.0]
* '''March 15, 2007''' - [http://www.cityonahillpress.com/article.php?id=452 Santa Cruz, CA explores building desalination plant to supplement water supply.]
==External links==
===Software===
* [https://www.esri.com/en-us/arcgis/products/arcgis-cityengine/overview ArchGIS CityEngine]
* [https://www.citycad.co.uk/solutions/citycad CityCAD]
* [https://www.qgis.org/en/site/ QGIS]
* [https://www.arcgis.com/index.html ArchGis]
* [https://graphisoft.com/solutions/archicad Archicad]
* [https://lumion.com/ Lumion]
===MIT Open Course Ware===
* [https://ocw.mit.edu/search/?d=Urban+Studies+and+Planning MIT Open Course Ware: Urban Studies and Planning]
===Ahwahnee Principles===
* [http://www.lgc.org/ahwahnee/index.html The Ahwahnee Principles] - Principles for Resource-Efficient and Livable Communities
<!-- footer templates -->
{{Sisterlinks|Urban studies and planning}}
<!-- categories -->
[[Category:Geography]]
[[Category:Urban Studies and Planning]]
<!-- interlanguage links -->
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Wikinews
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Unlike other Wikimedia sister projects which use a share-alike license, Wikinews contents are mostly available under Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 or later.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
{{daughters}}
*[[Wikiversity:Service community]]
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Unlike other Wikimedia sister projects which use a share-alike license, Wikinews contents are mostly available under Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 or later.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[[Wikiversity:Service community]]
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
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/* See also */ [https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Unlike other Wikimedia sister projects which use a share-alike license, Wikinews contents are mostly available under Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 or later.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
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Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026. It remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading.
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Unlike other Wikimedia sister projects which use a share-alike license, Wikinews contents are mostly available under Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 or later.
Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026. It remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
rh5kijk99yzieq74hx90sirux8slwkv
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2026-05-14T11:03:22Z
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Add summary of closure
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text/x-wiki
[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026 because the project "wasn’t able to fulfil its promise, and many of its functions were eclipsed by the notable news coverage in Wikipedias".*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews] Wikinews remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading. There were 31 editions (different languages) of Wikinews. Unlike other Wikimedia sister projects, which use a share-alike license, Wikinews contents are mostly available under Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 or later.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
nskjn7l41z7wlb7o45ovp88m46tmp8m
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026 because the project "wasn’t able to fulfil its promise, and many of its functions were eclipsed by the notable news coverage in Wikipedias".[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews] [[meta-:Wikimedia_Foundation_Community_Affairs_Committee/Sister_Projects_Task_Force/Results_of_the_consultation_about_Wikispore_and_Wikinews#Discussion|Specific criticisms]] included that Wikinews lacked a clear focus or consistent purposes (neither serving as an encyclopedic news summary nor excellent at original reporting and that it was the least active sister project]] and with diminishing engagement. There was mixed opinion about the suitability of curating news in a wiki format.
Wikinews remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading. There were 31 editions (different languages) of Wikinews. Some Wikinews language projects have been merged into Wikipedias. There were also proposals for different forms of WMF-based news such as [[meta:Wikinews Pulse|Wikinews Pulse]], based on Wikidata.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
53azuivbn89ouzxaainym3uidbrjvf6
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026 because the project "wasn’t able to fulfil its promise, and many of its functions were eclipsed by the notable news coverage in Wikipedias".[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews] [[meta:Wikimedia_Foundation_Community_Affairs_Committee/Sister_Projects_Task_Force/Results_of_the_consultation_about_Wikispore_and_Wikinews#Discussion|Specific criticisms]] included that Wikinews lacked a clear focus or consistent purposes (neither serving as an encyclopedic news summary nor excellent at original reporting and that it was the least active sister project]] and with diminishing engagement. There was mixed opinion about the suitability of curating news in a wiki format.
Wikinews remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading. There were 31 editions (different languages) of Wikinews. Some Wikinews language projects have been merged into Wikipedias. There were also proposals for different forms of WMF-based news such as [[meta:Wikinews Pulse|Wikinews Pulse]], based on Wikidata.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
efvq8cata9l7r7mapi8d994ueo1kje1
2809130
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026 because the project "wasn’t able to fulfil its promise, and many of its functions were eclipsed by the notable news coverage in Wikipedias".[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews] [[meta:Wikimedia_Foundation_Community_Affairs_Committee/Sister_Projects_Task_Force/Results_of_the_consultation_about_Wikispore_and_Wikinews#Discussion|Specific criticisms]] included that Wikinews lacked a clear focus or consistent purposes (neither serving as an encyclopedic news summary nor excellent at original reporting) and that it was the least active sister project, with diminishing engagement. There was mixed opinion about the suitability of curating news in a wiki format.
Wikinews remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading. There were 31 editions (different languages) of Wikinews. Some Wikinews language projects have been merged into Wikipedias. There were also proposals for different forms of WMF-based news such as [[meta:Wikinews Pulse|Wikinews Pulse]], based on Wikidata.
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
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There is a current proposal to continue journalism activities on Wikiversity [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Proposal to rehost Wikinews here]].
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text/x-wiki
[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026 because the project "wasn’t able to fulfil its promise, and many of its functions were eclipsed by the notable news coverage in Wikipedias".[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews] [[meta:Wikimedia_Foundation_Community_Affairs_Committee/Sister_Projects_Task_Force/Results_of_the_consultation_about_Wikispore_and_Wikinews#Discussion|Specific criticisms]] included that Wikinews lacked a clear focus or consistent purposes (neither serving as an encyclopedic news summary nor excellent at original reporting) and that it was the least active sister project, with diminishing engagement. There was mixed opinion about the suitability of curating news in a wiki format.
Wikinews remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading. There were 31 editions (different languages) of Wikinews. Some Wikinews language projects have been merged into Wikipedias. There were also proposals for different forms of WMF-based news such as [[meta:Wikinews Pulse|Wikinews Pulse]], based on Wikidata.
There is a current proposal to continue journalism activities on Wikiversity [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Proposal to rehost Wikinews here]].
== Contents ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
pieq6bmkhxo0klkmgn84y8bhdyg95wu
2809133
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2026-05-14T11:42:16Z
Jtneill
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The foundation stated in its closure recommendation that it is "difficult to claim that it is disseminating educational content and, even more so, that it is doing so effectively and globally." from [[n:Wikimedia Foundation closes Wikinews after 21 years|Wikimedia Foundation closes Wikinews after 21 years]] (Wikinews)
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[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|200px|right]]
[[n:|Wikinews]] was a free-content news source wiki and a project of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]] that was made read-only in 2026. Wikinews allowed anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects. Its mission, as stated on the main page of the English version, was to ''"create a diverse environment where citizen journalists can independently report the news on a wide variety of current events"''.
Wikinews was closed to editing and new content on 4 May 2026 because the project "wasn’t able to fulfil its promise, and many of its functions were eclipsed by the notable news coverage in Wikipedias".[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews] The foundation stated in its closure recommendation that it is "difficult to claim that it is disseminating educational content and, even more so, that it is doing so effectively and globally." [[meta:Wikimedia_Foundation_Community_Affairs_Committee/Sister_Projects_Task_Force/Results_of_the_consultation_about_Wikispore_and_Wikinews#Discussion|Specific criticisms]] included that Wikinews lacked a clear focus or consistent purposes (neither serving as an encyclopedic news summary nor excellent at original reporting) and that it was the least active sister project, with diminishing engagement. There was mixed opinion about the suitability of curating news in a wiki format.
Wikinews remains publicly accessible for reading, reference, and dump downloading. There were 31 editions (different languages) of Wikinews. Some Wikinews language projects have been merged into Wikipedias. There were also proposals for different forms of WMF-based news such as [[meta:Wikinews Pulse|Wikinews Pulse]], based on Wikidata.
There is a current proposal under consideration to continue journalism activities on Wikiversity [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Proposal to rehost Wikinews here]].
== Content that needs review ==
* [[Wikinews/How to write a Wikinews article]]
==See also==
*[https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=30328679#Board_of_Trustees_Approves_Closure_of_Wikinews Board of Trustees Approves Closure of Wikinews] (Meta-Wiki)
*[[n:Wikimedia Foundation closes Wikinews after 21 years|Wikimedia Foundation closes Wikinews after 21 years]] (Wikinews)
*[[School:Journalism|School of Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikinews| ]]
a3in9vauzw5q4m63trw1mh315xv2f5b
Trigonometry/Functions
0
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~2026-29106-22
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* See also '''[[Trigonometry/Polar]]''' for an approach that is useful for -∞<θ<∞
==Fundamental trigonometry functions==
There are six trigonometric functions in Trigonometry: sine, cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant, and cosecant.
:[[Image:TrigTriangle.svg|200px]]
==Sine==
* Sine θ is the length of the leg opposite θ over the length of the hypotenuse: <math>\sin\theta=\frac{opp}{hyp}</math>
==Cosine==
* Cosine θ is the length of the leg adjacent to θ over the hypotenuse: <math>\cos\theta=\frac{adj}{hyp}</math>
==Tangent==
* Tangent of θ is the length of the leg on the opposite side of the triangle from the angle θ over the length of the leg of the triangle adjacent to the angle θ: <math>\tan\theta=\frac{opp}{adj}</math>
These three can be memorized by use of the name of the princess "Soh Cah Toa," meaning:
* "'''s'''ine-'''o'''pposite-'''h'''ypotenuse
* '''c'''osine-'''a'''djacent-'''h'''ypotenuse
* '''t'''angent-'''o'''pposite-'''a'''djacent".
The remaining ratios are reciprocals of the previous ratios:
==Cotangent==
* Cotangent θ is the reciprocal of tangent θ: <math>\cot\theta=\frac{adj}{opp}</math>
==Secant==
* Secant θ is the reciprocal of cosine θ: <math>\sec\theta=\frac{hyp}{adj}</math>
==Cosecant==
* Cosecant θ is the reciprocal of sine θ: <math>\csc\theta=\frac{hyp}{opp}</math>
<br>
==Other considerations==
*Since the hypotenuse of a right triangle is always the longest side, <math>opp < hyp\,</math> and <math>adj < hyp\,</math>
*If we divide both sides of each of these inequalities by the positive number <math>hyp\,</math>, we get <math>\frac{opp}{hyp} < \frac{hyp}{hyp}\,</math> and <math>\frac{adj}{hyp} < \frac{hyp}{hyp}\,</math> <br>or <math>\sin \theta \leq 1\,</math> and <math>\cos \theta \leq 1\,</math>
==Table==
===Angle values===
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! θ !! radians !! sinθ !! cosθ !! tanθ !! cotθ !! secθ !! cosecθ
|-
| 0° || 0 || 0 || 1 || 0 || undefined || 1 || undefined
|-
| 30° || π/6 || 1/2 || √3/2|| 1/√3|| √3|| 2/√3|| 2
|-
| 45° || π/4 || 1/√2|| 1/√2|| 1 || 1 || √2|| √2
|-
| 60° || π/3 || √3/2|| 1/2 || √3|| 1/√3|| 2 ||2/√3
|-
| 90° || π/2 || 1 || 0 || undefined || 0 || undefined || 1
|-
| 180° || π || 0 || -1 || 0 || undefined || -1 || undefined
|-
| 270° || 3π/2 || -1 || 0 || undefined || 0 || undefined || -1
|-
| 360° || 2π || 0 || 1 || 0 || undefined || 1 || undefined
|}
==Quiz==
*[[Trigonometry/Functions/Quiz|Trigonometry/Functions/Quiz]]
==Other resources==
*'''Reading''': [[w:Trigonometric_Functions]] (Wikipedia)
*'''Videos''':
:[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F21S9Wpi0y8&feature=youtube_gdat Basic Trigonometry] (Youtube)
:[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QS4r_mqs-rY&feature=youtube_gdata Basic Trigonometry II] (Youtube)
*[[Trigonometry/Functions/Flash cards]]
[[Category:Trigonometric functions]]
tna6zp8as8kojdy0w1u393lkvif4vez
MediaWiki:Sitenotice id
8
37502
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2026-05-14T03:08:50Z
Jtneill
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+1
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109
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Biochemistry Exam Study Guide/BMC04
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University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health
<br>Biochemistry Exam 2 Study Guide
<br>BMC04
<br>
[[Image:Cytosine chemical structure.png|100px|Cytosine]]
[[Image:Uracil.svg|100px|Uracil]]
[[Image:Thymine chemical structure.png|130px|Thymine]]
[[Image:Fluorouracil.svg|150px|5-Fluorouracil]]
<br><br>
[[Image:Adenine chemical structure.png|150px|Adenine]]
[[Image:Guanine chemical structure.png|190px|Guanine]]
[[Image:Hypoxanthin_Struktur.png|150px|Hypoxanthine]]
A.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
| 6. adenine
| 1. cytosine
| 7. guanine
| 8. hypoxanthine
|-
| 5. 7-methylguanine
| 3. thymine
| 2. uracil
| 4. 5-fluorouracil
|}
B. Guanine-cytosine base pairs have a higher denaturation temperature (and are therefore more stable). This is because G-C base pairs form three hydrogen bonds instead of two, like A-T. Reference page 14.
As a side note, high salt concentrations can also stabilize DNA by shielding negatively charged phosphate groups from each other.
C. Uracil. DNA pyrimidines include cytosine and thymine, but not uracil.
D. Thymine. UV radiation can catalyze covalent bonding between adjacent pyrimidine (especially thymine) bases. The result is a [[thymine dimer]]. Reference page 19.
E. 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). 5-FU is administered to the patient and then converted to 5-F-dUMP by the pyrmimide base salvage pathway. So to be more accurate, it is 5-F-dUMP that is an irreversible inhibitor of thymidylate synthase. Reference page 78.
F. Hypoxanthine. The pathway AMP --> A --> I --> hypoxanthine is catalyzed by phosphatase, adenosine deaminase (ADA) and nucleoside phosphorylase, respectively. Reference page 76.
As a side note, deficiency in this pathway (ADA in particular) leads to the immunodeficient phenotype SCID.
G. 7-methylguanine. This is the 5' cap. Reference page 36.
H. Adenine. This is the 3' poly(A) tail. Reference page 36.
[[Category:Biochemistry Exam Study Guide]]
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Template:Administering Wikiversity
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User talk:Jtneill
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BigKrow
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/* Thoughts about Wikinews closure */ new section
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<!-- {{Out of town}} -->
<!-- {{Long wikibreak|image=Leaf_1_web.jpg|[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]|mid-Jan, 2012.}} -->
{{{{TALKPAGENAME}}/Header}} {{TOCright}}
== Your feedback is welcome at [[User talk:Username142857]] ==
Dear my mentor, I believe we have already seen [[User:Username142857]] making too many non-Wikiversity questions at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/MathXplore]] and [[Wikiversity talk:Custodianship/Archive 6]]. In the beginning, I answered them one by one as part of demonstrating my competency to answer questions as a custodian candidate (and they were somewhat related to my global contributions) and courtesy to discussion participants. However, by facing [[special:diff/2631774]] and [[special:diff/2618170]] (editing discussion archives, re-opening closed discussions), I started to believe that we should bring an end to their excessive non-Wikiversity usage of Wikiversity (talk) namespaces. According to [[:w:User talk:Username142857]] (especially [[:w:special:diff/1073391896]]), [[User:Username142857]] is evaluated as {{tq|the other editors are tired to waste their time to read and answer your non-useful edits.}} and I think they are doing the similar thing at Wikiversity. Our community may have limited tolerance for such behavior. If you had any experience of handling such issues in the past, your feedback may be helpful to allow [[User:Username142857]] to improve their behavior. Thank you for your attention and mentoring. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 03:21, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
: {{ping|MathXplore}} Thanks for the heads up. Sorry for slow response. I'm recovering from COVID, but on way back. Thankyou for your very patient, clear, and supportive feedback on Username142857's talk page which, along with Mikeu, seems to have communicated the concerns and hopefully lead to a change/improvement in behaviour. What a great example of handling challenging behaviour courteously. Fingers crossed. Keep well. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:39, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
== [[:b:Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Free will and neuroscience]] ==
Hello, can this be related to your project? Should this be imported here? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 12:10, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
: Sorry, the page has been deleted, should we request temporary restoration for import, or should we just ask the author to resubmit to Wikiversity? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 12:29, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
::Thank-you for pointing this out. Yes, it does look like one of my students' editing. It is a little puzzling how the user ended up on Wikibooks. It is OK that that the wikibooks page has been deleted because the user also appears to be underway here: [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Free will and neuroscience]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:53, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
== [[Template:Subst:ME/BCS]] ==
Hello, should this template be kept for your project? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 11:42, 31 July 2024 (UTC)
:Yes, please - but it could be moved from Template into a subpage of [[Motivation and emotion]]. Note that we are actively using the template at the moment to help build out the [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024]] pages. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:43, 1 August 2024 (UTC)
== [[:File:Rejection sensitivity chart.webp]] ==
One of your students uploaded this image to Commons as part of [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Rejection sensitivity]]. Unfortunately, it's meaningless AI-generated sludge. Can this image be removed from the chapter to allow it to be deleted from Commons?
(You may want to have a word with your students about AI-generated content; I think some of the text in this chapter was generated by ChatGPT as well.) [[User:Omphalographer|Omphalographer]] ([[User talk:Omphalographer|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Omphalographer|contribs]]) 02:52, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
: {{ping|Omphalographer}} Great, thanks for picking this up and letting me know. Yes please, delete. I've given the student a heads-up here: [[User talk:Yonis Yousufzai]]. We're covering genAI in classes this week {{smile}}. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Bots/Status#Leaderbot]] ==
Hi, is there a chance you can approve this bot request (or otherwise let me know if there are any issues)? Thanks in advance. [[User:Leaderboard|Leaderboard]] ([[User talk:Leaderboard|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leaderboard|contribs]]) 15:03, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
== VDT - U3126684 chapter ==
Hi James ! I saw you added the hanging indent which is amazing, thank you so much! However, I had a few references missing and I tried to add them in but they didn't keep the required APA formatting. I deleted the template and reused the hanging indent template but it won't keep any formatting. Can you please help me fix it?
[[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Vulnerable dark triad, motivation, and emotion|Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Vulnerable dark triad, motivation, and emotion - Wikiversity]] [[User:U3126684|U3126684]] ([[User talk:U3126684|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/U3126684|contribs]]) 11:16, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:James, I figured it out! I was just missing the "}}" at the end of the text... all solved! [[User:U3126684|U3126684]] ([[User talk:U3126684|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/U3126684|contribs]]) 11:31, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
== Your feedback may be needed at [[User talk:Tule-hog]] ==
Hello, user:Dan Polansky is currently communicating with a participant on this talk page. As Dan's mentor, I thought you may want to provide feedback so I came here for a notice. ({{ping|Guy vandegrift}} Your feedback is also welcome). [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 06:20, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
:Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I will keep up with further developments. [[User:Guy vandegrift|Guy vandegrift]] ([[User talk:Guy vandegrift|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Guy vandegrift|contribs]]) 00:07, 8 October 2024 (UTC)
== [[General health and well-being]] ==
This page was in the proposed-deletion state for over 3 months, with no opposition. Should I feel free to delete the page? I guess it seemed to be a good idea back in 2011 (at least as a stub to get things started), but no one expanded it into anything really useful during all these years. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 11:24, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
:Hi Dan - thanks for checking - yes, it can go - I've removed the one incoming link to this page. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:39, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
== Enquiry about Correct Setup of Wikiversity? ==
Hi James,
I just had a few questions regarding my Setup on Wikiversity:
1. We are asked to enable the Visual Editor. Have I done this correctly? Or how do I do it if I have not?
2. Have I chosen a book chapter and inserted my name correctly?
3. There isn’t a discussion forum page on our UCLearn for me to comment on, for the assessment, so where should I comment?
Thank you, I look forward to hearing back from you.
[[User:Hcoad|Hcoad]] ([[User talk:Hcoad|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Hcoad|contribs]]) 14:27, 2 August 2025 (UTC)
:@[[User:Hcoad|Hcoad]]:
:# To access the Visual Editor, use "Create" for the first edit on a page, or "Edit" thereafter
:# Sign-up looks good
:# You can create a new discussion thread on UCLearn about a topic of interest or respond to existing threads such as "What do you really want to learn about?"
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:34, 2 August 2025 (UTC)
== Problem with curator ==
Reading above, may i address you as James? If so, hello James, i have a problem with a curator and would ask if you are a contact to talk about it. If not, sorry to bother you. Kind regards, [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:19, 10 October 2025 (UTC)
:Hi Harold,
:Thanks for getting in touch.
:Sorry about the teething issues in getting underway with your contributions to Wikiversity.
:Let's hopefully have a constructive discussion here, which you've initiated: [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Contest removal of article]]
:Sincerely,
:James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:38, 11 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Hi James,
::Thank you very much for sending me the article text, I really appriciate that. If not to much to ask, could you also send me the template? Template:Condensed matter physics see: User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size.
::Did you read the disucussion with Dan Polansky? I think its rather weird. I answered all his questions truthfully, since i have nothing to hide. (see my user page) And than he started some trivia about the double slit expiriment, went on without listening. Like the article was a sort of explosive that must be removed ASAP. That is not the way a curator should behave (my opinion).
::I could acctually use a mentor physics to avoid mistakes in the future.
::I know both my articles have flaws but i can fix that in time.
::Do you maybe have suggestions?
::Last but not least, thanks again for the time you took to help me !!! Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:14, 12 October 2025 (UTC)
: @James: To reduce or eliminate further risk that I am abusing my curator priviledges in relation to suspected copyright violation (I don't think I am, but my point of view can be skewed), I can start tagging material for copyright violation using a template (does not require curator privileges). That should address concerns? --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:01, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] As long as you remove the insulting (in my opinion) remarks on both articles and remove the tag -since it does not violate '''[[creativecommons:by-sa/3.0/|CC-BY-SA 4.0]] license'''- i will be satisfied. As i explained, Wikipedia use a free-to-use policy. Also could you please clarify this code: <nowiki>{{subst:</nowiki>[[Template:No thanks|no thanks]]|pg=User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size|url=<nowiki>{{{url}}}</nowiki>}} [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • . After this is resolved i'm willing to consider this complaint closed. Maybe we can start over with a new and different conversation, since I strongly believe in AGF. You have a way much longer experience on Wikiversity than I do, so perhaps you could help me in a friendly and constructive way? It seems we have a lot in common and I shall gladly listen to any comments.
::CC @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:16, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::: The page [[User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size]] currently features multiple sentences from a CC-BY-SA source without using quotation marks. My determination is that the page shows copyright violation (failure to ''attribute'') of CC-BY-SA and should therefore be deleted.
::: If you, James, remove the copyright violation tagging, I will understand it as you taking responsibility for a possible copyright violation and I will probably disengage (or do I have a duty to take more pains and try to override your assessment?) --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:31, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::: As for "As i explained, Wikipedia use a free-to-use policy": that seems to be a misunderstanding or too vague understanding; Wikipedia uses CC-BY-SA copyright license, which requires proper ''attribution'' of authorship, which could have been done in the edit summary that created the article, but was not done. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:35, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] It has already been added, as you would have seen upon checking. I would still appreciate a response to the other points I mentioned earlier, if you are willing to continue the discussion. If not, your choise. CC:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Cheers[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:08, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
: James, as my mentor in my role of a custodian, if you want me to do something, or if you have a recommendation for me, please let me know on my talk page. I am struggling to figure out how to navigate these waters. You can also use email if it seems better from some perspective. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 10:21, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] Why not take a step back? I offered you a solution and a possibility to cooperate instead of continuing a conflict. I still believe that working together is more productive than arguing over small details. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:26, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
:::The discussion at this talk page ended not very fruitfully.
:::Pitty, i really tried to make piece.
:::Yet I am not the only one complainting about Dan’s behaviour.
:::
:::Anything I can do (or you) ?
:::Am I free to remove remarks and/or tags?
:::I dont want to end up in an editwar.
:::
:::Sorry to have asked so much of your time [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 15:54, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
Thanks, both. May I suggest:
* {{ping|Harold Foppele}}: Any text you don't write yourself needs appropriate attribution or removal, otherwise it runs the risk of copyright violation. For example, this message appears on each edit source screen underneath the edit summary box: "Do not copy text from other websites without permission. It will be deleted." If text is copied from Wikipedia it needs to be acknowledged as such because it is licensed under CC-by-SA which allows re-use but requires acknowledgement. Such acknowledgement could be made in the edit summary when the contribution is first made. If not, then the next best could be to put quotation marks around copied text and a link to the source(s) of the text.
* {{ping|Dan Polansky}}: Appreciate your administrative work. Let's try to AGF and work constructively with new users who are learning how to contribute. Wikiversity is a learning environment.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 20:42, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Thank you very much. I hope it will work out since Dan does not respond, to me that is. Could you find time to look at the revised [[User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size]] i made additions to it, but since it is a mix of WP, other sources and OR, it is alomost impossible to keep quoting. So i made a general intro. Is that enough? Also 99% of the [[]] refer directly to WP since WV does not have most of the words/pages. I also recreated the template so that it shows all original text/items. The new section ==Tunneling== is not cited yet, but it wiil be when I have time. Can I remove the tags myself? Thanks again [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:21, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::Looks like a solid chunk is copied from Wikipedia: https://www.copyscape.com/view.php?o=4829&u=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMesoscopic_physics&t=1760433515&s=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikiversity.org%2Fwiki%2FUser%3AHarold_Foppele%2FQuantum_A_Matter_Of_Size&w=66&i=1&r=10
::without appropriate acknowledgement.
::Some ways to deal with this appropriately include:
::# Acknowledge the source in the edit summary when content is added to the page
::# Using quotation marks and citations to indicate the source of any content which you haven't authored yourself
::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:02, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::The "chunk" is correct :) I took that since it fits perfect to the article. At the top of the page I quoted:
:::{Wikipedia [[wikipedia:Mesoscopic_physics|Mesoscopic physics]]<nowiki>}}</nowiki>
:::[[creativecommons:by-sa/4.0/|License CC-BY-SA 4.0]]
:::In Edit summary: The first section of this article is copied from Wikipedia "Mesoscopic physics"
:::Is that sufficient ?
:::I did cite almost everything what is not so much requested in Wikiversity as far as i found out, but is a first requirement in Wikipedia.
:::Is it OK if I remove the tags ? Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:51, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
::::I think it would be more transparent and demonstrate greater academic integrity to use quotation marks for text which is copied from elsewhere, especially because there was no appropriate edit summary when the text was added to the page.
::::[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User%3AHarold_Foppele%2FQuantum_A_Matter_Of_Size&diff=2760582&oldid=2760574 Example of how this might be done].
::::I don't suggest removing the copyright tag until copied text is more clearly quoted and cited and there is consensus that it [[wikt:pass muster|passes muster]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::Thank you SO MUCH !! I had no idea that a <blockquote existed nor what it does. This is the first time i used a Wikipedia copy into Wikiversity. So a simple explanation, as you gave me now, would have prevented all this. :) I changed the layout a bit to make it view nicer. Is this required also for my own publications on Wikipedia? Thanks again!! and a goodnight to you [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:28, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
::::::I decided to re-write the copyrighted text in my own words. It feels better this way, what do you think? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 13:07, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::Great, I think that makes a big difference to rewrite in your own words. I've removed the copyright tag.
:::::::Let me know if I can do anything else as you go along. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:03, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::: The page still contains copyright violation. I am starting to track problems at [[User:Dan Polansky/Problem reports (about Wikiversity problems)]]. I will disengage from Harold Foppele; this is not being productive and can lead to my harm and thereby harm to the English Wikiversity. I have seen this kind of people elsewhere: I explained a class/type of a problem to the person and pointed to an example for clarity and the person corrected just the single item I gave as an example. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 04:17, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] Since you want to take this personally instead of having a civilized conversation, I will not engage in a mud-throwing contest or labeling people as “this kind of people". I saw your problem report and I seriously question your objectivity as a science debater. You took ONE paragraph from an article—a paragraph that had been modified (as your question mark even shows)—plus a scientific debate over a previously accepted article on Wikipedia. You completely ignored the accepted contributions I have made to Wikipedia. Yet this alone is enough for you to request that a contributor be blocked.
:::::::::What do I gain from spending hours and hours doing research for a new article? Hours and hours searching for proper references? Hours writing and rewriting the text? How much do I get paid? Nothing. How much honor or credit do I receive? None. So what "kind of people" am I? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 08:21, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::: DFX. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:26, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::::Exactly my point. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:19, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold]] and [[User:Dan Polansky|Dan]] — I appreciate your considerations and communications. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:51, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
== Peer review ==
@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Hello James, I hope you are doing well. The 2 articles I wrote are now ready to be published. Is there some kind of peer review possible? I tried to find some help at [[Portal:Particle physics]] but all data there is very old. How can we move forward from this? Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:52, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:Perhaps try [[Wikiversity:Colloquium]] - that's the general way to communicate with English Wikiversity users/editors. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:08, 17 October 2025 (UTC)
== Hello James, I need your help. ==
Could join the discussion with us in [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Concern regarding curator conduct User:Dan Polansky]]
We would like to solicit your input on this matter. [[User:Tomlovesfar|Tomlovesfar]] ([[User talk:Tomlovesfar|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tomlovesfar|contribs]]) 03:54, 17 October 2025 (UTC)
== Quantum ==
Hello James, If you have time could you lease look at [[Quantum]]. An essay like page with simple information, that might attract students. I Know its not your field, but maybe it appeals to you. Thanks, [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 23:39, 18 October 2025 (UTC)
== ShakespeareFan00 ==
Goodevening, please, if you have time, take a look at the edits made by this user. A few hundred in 2 days ! Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 20:35, 31 October 2025 (UTC)
== When is a quote or blockquote needed? ==
Hi James, I hope you are doing well. I did wrote some articles and parts off them at Wikipedia. If i want to use parts of it at Wikiversity do i still need to quote that parts? Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 11:19, 2 November 2025 (UTC)
:Basically, if you didn't author text which is being added, then the genesis of the text needs to be made clear (e.g, edit summary, quotation etc.) It is also possible to import pages (e.g., from Wikipedia) which brings in the full edit history. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:38, 3 November 2025 (UTC)
== Publishing transcripts ==
Hi James, Is it allowed to publish a transcript in Wikiversity as per my example at [[User:Harold Foppele/sandbox-2]]. If not, then I remove the page ofcourse. I think it could be nice if I edit it to make it easy accessible in various Wikipages.
But again, if its not allowed, i remove it. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 11:28, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
== User:Dan Polansky ==
@Jtneill , Hi James, You are a curator/bureaucrat, if i'm not mistaken. Please look at: [[User:Dan Polansky/Problem reports (about Wikiversity problems)]] I feel outright insulted and ask you (if you can) to put an end to it. Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:59, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
: I wrote: "The user account created articles in the subject of quantum mechanics that use wiki-voice and do not state the author. Since it is very likely that he does not understand quantum mechanics as per evidence in the revision history of his user talk page, it is also likely that they contain countless errors. The articles are presented to the reader as valid referenced content, not as one person's exercise in who-knows-what. Preventing the user account from creating new pages and moving all his articles to user space would address the issue."
: I think it is accurate. By now, we have enough evidence I think that the user account is a troll account, an intentional disruptor. There are multiple behavioral signs, both in Wikipedia and in Wikiversity.
: I propose an indef block of the user account. An alternative is not to feed into this troll account. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 18:03, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::Well well here we go again [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 18:18, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::: I opened [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Indefinite block for Harold_Foppele]]. I fear it will be in vain. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 18:26, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::::You are allowed to hope [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 18:42, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
== Moving to personal namespace ==
What are the policies or customs on Wikiversity for moving pages to personal userspace? Isn't there a risk that Wikiversity will turn into a blogging platform where many users will cultivate pages in their userspace and the outside world will not benefit from it?
I see moving to ns user as a frequent suggestion in Requests for deletion (RFD). I would understand moving to ns Draft, which is clearly defined and there is a chance that the resource will then get into the main ns, thus serving the community. I would understand the suggestion to move to another wikiproject, where the text will serve the community. But I don't really understand the frequent moves to personal ns. Since it's in the RFD, it should either be kept or deleted. If someone contributes to Wikiversity, they automatically agree to its policies and also to the fact that they don't own the pages and someone can put them up for deletion. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:36, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
I personally don't need a free website to host my pages. How would I get rid of the unfinished [[Pomology]] meta course if it was moved to my NS? ([https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Requests_for_Deletion#c-Dan_Polansky-20251121091100-Juandev-20251120220900 Moving it to my own NS is suggested in RFD]). I'm putting it in the Request for deletion because, even though I started it, it looks like other editors had significant input there. Will I have the right to request speedy deletion if the pages are moved to my user ns?
I think this tactic of moving to personal space is poorly thought out, but it has become the norm.
Is there any guideline or discussion from before? If something appears in a deletion request, the majority decides that it should be moved to user ns, how can the person in question defend themselves that they don't want it in their own ns? It seems the community is pressuring the original author to agree to deletion. It seems that the user ns is an untouchable territory into which the community has the right to throw whatever it thinks from the main ns. So why aren't those pages deleted when the community decides that they don't belong in the main ns? --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:30, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
{{ping|Juandev}} I replied on your talk page. But here's another version: Personally, in general, I try to keep my notes etc. in user space. Then if I have something more developed to share and collaborate on, then main space. Draft could be helpful to keep main space tidy, but is very quiet/unused, so in reality most drafts are in main space. But if the content is dubious, underdeveloped, lacking citation/peer review etc. then delete, or user space if it could still be developed. That's roughly how I see it. But everyone has a slightly different view/preference, so discuss to develop consensus. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:48, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
== Ninefold Resonance Theory ==
Dear Jtneill, I noticed that when you deleted [[Ninefold Resonance Theory]], you accidentally deleted the article in my own user space as well. However, I got the impression that most users felt that it should be allowed to exist in my own user space. I thought long and hard about my theory and I'm disappointed that it's gone now... Could you move the article back to my own user space, so not in the main space? I look forward to hearing from you! Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:22, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
:Nevermind. I will move all my ideas to everybodywiki.com. 😄 Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:36, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
::Could you please e-mail me the source code of the deleted page? Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:42, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
:[[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]]: Apologies, the user page version was accidentally deleted. It has now been restored. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
::Thank you! ☺️ Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:58, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
:::All pages in my user space have been moved to EverybodyWiki. Could you perhaps delete all the pages with the {{tl|speedy}} template on it? Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 07:08, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
::::[[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]]: The main space redirects and all your user sub-pages have been deleted. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 1 December 2025 (UTC)
:::::Thank you! Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 08:24, 1 December 2025 (UTC)
== Vandalism ==
{{ping|Jtneill}} May I draw your attantion to this!
==== 6 December 2025 ====
* cur[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&diff=prev&oldid=2778412 prev] <bdi>[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&oldid=2778412 13:15, 6 December 2025]</bdi> [[User:Revolving Doormat|<bdi>Revolving Doormat</bdi>]] [[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]] 75,351 bytes +279 request speedy delete under CSD1 [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&action=edit&undoafter=2777042&undo=2778412 undo][[Special:Thanks/2778412|thank]] [[Special:Tags|Tag]]: [[Wikiversity:VisualEditor|Visual edit: Switched]]
[[User:Revolving Doormat|<bdi>Revolving Doormat</bdi>]] account created today
at the same time as = <bdi>~2025-38873-79</bdi> =
So I assume they are all the same.
Am I allowed to remove the delete template by myself?
Greetings [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 16:41, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:We are not the same person. I came here from an AfD on Wikipedia and your page creation ban here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents#c-Ldm1954-20251205133800-Requesting_page_creation_block_of_User:Harold_Foppele
:The temp user already identified that I notified WP about the same activity on WV, and that brought them here. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 17:08, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::Its so coincidental that you all share the same IP range isn't it? Using an empty account? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:19, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:::The user already identified their WP account and my WP user id is the same one I have here. I don't believe you have access to our IP addresses, but but based on their WP biography, that would also be impossible. I will not be engaging with you further. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 17:25, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::::What you believe or not is up to you [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:41, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
== User Dan Polansky ==
I want to draw your attention to the edits (mainly copy/paste) by [[user:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] today. Still trying to act as curator? They continue their previous harassment. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:07, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
== Happy New Year, Jtneill! ==
<div style="border: 3px solid #FFD700; background-color: #FFFAF0; padding:0.2em 0.4em; height:auto; min-height:173px; border-radius:1em; {{box-shadow|0.1em|0.1em|0.5em|rgba(0,0,0,0.75)}}<!--
-->" class="plainlinks">
[[File:Everlasting Fireworks looped.gif|left|x173px]][[File:Happy new year 01.svg|x173px|right]]
{{Paragraph break}}
{{Center|{{resize|179%|'''''[[New Year|Happy New Year]]!'''''}}}}
'''Jtneill''',<br />Have a prosperous, productive and enjoyable [[New Year]], and thanks for your contributions to Wikiversity.
<br />[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:10, 2 January 2026 (UTC)<br /><br />
</div>
''{{resize|88%|Send New Year cheer by adding {{tls|Happy New Year fireworks}} to user talk pages.}}''
{{clear}}<!-- From template:Happy New Year fireworks -->
== Please delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]] ==
Reason: This is a request by the author (major contributor). Custodians don't have interface admin rights, so custodians cannot delete this page. Bureaucrats can delete this page by temporarily adding themselves to the interface admin user group ([[User_talk:Jtneill/Archive/2024#Please_delete_MediaWiki:Wikidebate.js]]). Thank you for your attention. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 09:11, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
== DELETE request ==
Please DELETE [[Creating Media Literacy and You/Fox, the Great Depression, the Great Recession, and our future]] to [[Media Literacy and You/Fox, the Great Depression, the Great Recession, and our future]]. I created the article with an erroneous name. I will recreate it with the name I want. Thanks, [[User:DavidMCEddy|DavidMCEddy]] ([[User talk:DavidMCEddy|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/DavidMCEddy|contribs]]) 20:15, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
: {{Done}} [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 13:12, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
== Archiving ==
Hi and hello @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I did some archiving from Colloquium and RCA. If you have time that I'm on the right track? It where only a few, so if I did wrong, its easily undone, otherwise I continue as per request. Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 19:21, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] Please remember to user <nowiki>{{archive|Wikiversity:Colloquium}}</nowiki> instead of <nowiki>{{archive}}</nowiki> so that people who find themselves in the archives know where to go if they are unsure of anything. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 07:12, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] I have literally no idea what you are talking about. So elaborate please. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 08:53, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::Ahhh I see what you mean. Strange that you comment on MY edits only. NONE of the archive templates at WC archive have that. Did you overlook that?[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:13, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::::That’s why the discussion parameter is red linked, I am working on that. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:22, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::::Well, you could have said that instead. I think it's a bit overdone, since the page title is reads already Archive. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:26, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::::::New users will click on the red linked, which brings them to create the talk page, which is not watched so they won’t receive a response to their question. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:15, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::::::That is true [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:58, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
== Email ==
I sent you an email about a private abuse filter, feel free to take a look. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:39, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
== AI slop, ownership, and wikilawyering. ==
Using AI images is worse than no images. Your constant reverting of reasonable edits removing images you prompted on pages you wrote would be considered [[w:wp:OWN]]ership on Wikipedia; even if there is no general guideline on Wikiversity the spirit of not having the final say because just you made the page is applicable to all Wikimedia wikis. Reverting a reasonable edit because it lacks an image seems like [[w:wp:WIKILAWYER]]ing— I don’t know if edit summaries are ''required'' here, but I doubt it, and on most wikis they are simply recommended. Not having one doesn’t invalidate the edit. [[User:Dronebogus|Dronebogus]] ([[User talk:Dronebogus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dronebogus|contribs]]) 05:27, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
:I understand that you don't like many AI images because you consider them slop. My view is that some of these AI images can be useful for educational purposes.
:I understand that you think an alternative or no image is better than some AI images. My view is that some AI images are better than no image and are either useful in addition to alternative images or more useful than some alternatives.
:May I suggest deciding first on Commons whether to keep an image, rather than removing from Wikiversity and then nominating for deletion on Commons because of no use.
:I have no interest in edit warring. I'll invite [[WV:RCA]] to review your recent edits. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:20, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== You may be an eligible candidate for the U4C election ==
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Greetings,
The [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee|Universal Code of Conduct Coordinating Committee (U4C)]] seeks candidates for the 2026 election. The U4C is the global committee responsible for overseeing enforcement of the [[foundation:Special:MyLanguage/Policy:Universal Code of Conduct|Universal Code of Conduct]]. Elections are held annually, if elected a committee member serves for two years.
This year the U4C requires candidates to hold administrator rights on at least one wiki, which is why you are being contacted as you appear to hold this right. There are other requirements, such as candidates must be at least 18 years old and may not be employed by the Wikimedia Foundation or other related chapters and affiliates. You can find more information in the [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee/Election/2026#Call_for_Candidates|call for candidates on Meta-wiki]]. Additionally, the committee's working language is English; some ability to communicate in English is required.
The election opens on 18 May, if you are eligible and interested you have until 10 May to submit your candidacy. There will week between for candidates to answer questions from the community. Voting takes place privately in [[m:Special:MyLanguage/SecurePoll|SecurePoll]], successful candidates must receive at least 60% support. More information is available on [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee/Election/2026|the 2026 Elections page]], including timelines and other candidacy information. If you read over the material and consider yourself qualified, please consider submitting your name to run for the committee. If you think someone else in your community might be interested and qualified, please encourage them to run.
In partnership with the U4C -- [[m:User:Keegan (WMF)|Keegan (WMF)]] ([[m:User_talk:Keegan (WMF)|talk]]) 18:32, 28 April 2026 (UTC) </div>
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== Thoughts about Wikinews closure ==
I think Wikiversity could bring in Wikinews users possibly. Thoughts? @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 23:05, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Your feedback is welcome at [[User talk:Username142857]] ==
Dear my mentor, I believe we have already seen [[User:Username142857]] making too many non-Wikiversity questions at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/MathXplore]] and [[Wikiversity talk:Custodianship/Archive 6]]. In the beginning, I answered them one by one as part of demonstrating my competency to answer questions as a custodian candidate (and they were somewhat related to my global contributions) and courtesy to discussion participants. However, by facing [[special:diff/2631774]] and [[special:diff/2618170]] (editing discussion archives, re-opening closed discussions), I started to believe that we should bring an end to their excessive non-Wikiversity usage of Wikiversity (talk) namespaces. According to [[:w:User talk:Username142857]] (especially [[:w:special:diff/1073391896]]), [[User:Username142857]] is evaluated as {{tq|the other editors are tired to waste their time to read and answer your non-useful edits.}} and I think they are doing the similar thing at Wikiversity. Our community may have limited tolerance for such behavior. If you had any experience of handling such issues in the past, your feedback may be helpful to allow [[User:Username142857]] to improve their behavior. Thank you for your attention and mentoring. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 03:21, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
: {{ping|MathXplore}} Thanks for the heads up. Sorry for slow response. I'm recovering from COVID, but on way back. Thankyou for your very patient, clear, and supportive feedback on Username142857's talk page which, along with Mikeu, seems to have communicated the concerns and hopefully lead to a change/improvement in behaviour. What a great example of handling challenging behaviour courteously. Fingers crossed. Keep well. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:39, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
== [[:b:Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Free will and neuroscience]] ==
Hello, can this be related to your project? Should this be imported here? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 12:10, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
: Sorry, the page has been deleted, should we request temporary restoration for import, or should we just ask the author to resubmit to Wikiversity? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 12:29, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
::Thank-you for pointing this out. Yes, it does look like one of my students' editing. It is a little puzzling how the user ended up on Wikibooks. It is OK that that the wikibooks page has been deleted because the user also appears to be underway here: [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Free will and neuroscience]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:53, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
== [[Template:Subst:ME/BCS]] ==
Hello, should this template be kept for your project? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 11:42, 31 July 2024 (UTC)
:Yes, please - but it could be moved from Template into a subpage of [[Motivation and emotion]]. Note that we are actively using the template at the moment to help build out the [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024]] pages. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:43, 1 August 2024 (UTC)
== [[:File:Rejection sensitivity chart.webp]] ==
One of your students uploaded this image to Commons as part of [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Rejection sensitivity]]. Unfortunately, it's meaningless AI-generated sludge. Can this image be removed from the chapter to allow it to be deleted from Commons?
(You may want to have a word with your students about AI-generated content; I think some of the text in this chapter was generated by ChatGPT as well.) [[User:Omphalographer|Omphalographer]] ([[User talk:Omphalographer|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Omphalographer|contribs]]) 02:52, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
: {{ping|Omphalographer}} Great, thanks for picking this up and letting me know. Yes please, delete. I've given the student a heads-up here: [[User talk:Yonis Yousufzai]]. We're covering genAI in classes this week {{smile}}. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Bots/Status#Leaderbot]] ==
Hi, is there a chance you can approve this bot request (or otherwise let me know if there are any issues)? Thanks in advance. [[User:Leaderboard|Leaderboard]] ([[User talk:Leaderboard|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leaderboard|contribs]]) 15:03, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
== VDT - U3126684 chapter ==
Hi James ! I saw you added the hanging indent which is amazing, thank you so much! However, I had a few references missing and I tried to add them in but they didn't keep the required APA formatting. I deleted the template and reused the hanging indent template but it won't keep any formatting. Can you please help me fix it?
[[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Vulnerable dark triad, motivation, and emotion|Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Vulnerable dark triad, motivation, and emotion - Wikiversity]] [[User:U3126684|U3126684]] ([[User talk:U3126684|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/U3126684|contribs]]) 11:16, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:James, I figured it out! I was just missing the "}}" at the end of the text... all solved! [[User:U3126684|U3126684]] ([[User talk:U3126684|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/U3126684|contribs]]) 11:31, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
== Your feedback may be needed at [[User talk:Tule-hog]] ==
Hello, user:Dan Polansky is currently communicating with a participant on this talk page. As Dan's mentor, I thought you may want to provide feedback so I came here for a notice. ({{ping|Guy vandegrift}} Your feedback is also welcome). [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 06:20, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
:Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I will keep up with further developments. [[User:Guy vandegrift|Guy vandegrift]] ([[User talk:Guy vandegrift|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Guy vandegrift|contribs]]) 00:07, 8 October 2024 (UTC)
== [[General health and well-being]] ==
This page was in the proposed-deletion state for over 3 months, with no opposition. Should I feel free to delete the page? I guess it seemed to be a good idea back in 2011 (at least as a stub to get things started), but no one expanded it into anything really useful during all these years. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 11:24, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
:Hi Dan - thanks for checking - yes, it can go - I've removed the one incoming link to this page. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:39, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
== Enquiry about Correct Setup of Wikiversity? ==
Hi James,
I just had a few questions regarding my Setup on Wikiversity:
1. We are asked to enable the Visual Editor. Have I done this correctly? Or how do I do it if I have not?
2. Have I chosen a book chapter and inserted my name correctly?
3. There isn’t a discussion forum page on our UCLearn for me to comment on, for the assessment, so where should I comment?
Thank you, I look forward to hearing back from you.
[[User:Hcoad|Hcoad]] ([[User talk:Hcoad|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Hcoad|contribs]]) 14:27, 2 August 2025 (UTC)
:@[[User:Hcoad|Hcoad]]:
:# To access the Visual Editor, use "Create" for the first edit on a page, or "Edit" thereafter
:# Sign-up looks good
:# You can create a new discussion thread on UCLearn about a topic of interest or respond to existing threads such as "What do you really want to learn about?"
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:34, 2 August 2025 (UTC)
== Problem with curator ==
Reading above, may i address you as James? If so, hello James, i have a problem with a curator and would ask if you are a contact to talk about it. If not, sorry to bother you. Kind regards, [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:19, 10 October 2025 (UTC)
:Hi Harold,
:Thanks for getting in touch.
:Sorry about the teething issues in getting underway with your contributions to Wikiversity.
:Let's hopefully have a constructive discussion here, which you've initiated: [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Contest removal of article]]
:Sincerely,
:James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:38, 11 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Hi James,
::Thank you very much for sending me the article text, I really appriciate that. If not to much to ask, could you also send me the template? Template:Condensed matter physics see: User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size.
::Did you read the disucussion with Dan Polansky? I think its rather weird. I answered all his questions truthfully, since i have nothing to hide. (see my user page) And than he started some trivia about the double slit expiriment, went on without listening. Like the article was a sort of explosive that must be removed ASAP. That is not the way a curator should behave (my opinion).
::I could acctually use a mentor physics to avoid mistakes in the future.
::I know both my articles have flaws but i can fix that in time.
::Do you maybe have suggestions?
::Last but not least, thanks again for the time you took to help me !!! Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:14, 12 October 2025 (UTC)
: @James: To reduce or eliminate further risk that I am abusing my curator priviledges in relation to suspected copyright violation (I don't think I am, but my point of view can be skewed), I can start tagging material for copyright violation using a template (does not require curator privileges). That should address concerns? --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:01, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] As long as you remove the insulting (in my opinion) remarks on both articles and remove the tag -since it does not violate '''[[creativecommons:by-sa/3.0/|CC-BY-SA 4.0]] license'''- i will be satisfied. As i explained, Wikipedia use a free-to-use policy. Also could you please clarify this code: <nowiki>{{subst:</nowiki>[[Template:No thanks|no thanks]]|pg=User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size|url=<nowiki>{{{url}}}</nowiki>}} [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • . After this is resolved i'm willing to consider this complaint closed. Maybe we can start over with a new and different conversation, since I strongly believe in AGF. You have a way much longer experience on Wikiversity than I do, so perhaps you could help me in a friendly and constructive way? It seems we have a lot in common and I shall gladly listen to any comments.
::CC @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:16, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::: The page [[User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size]] currently features multiple sentences from a CC-BY-SA source without using quotation marks. My determination is that the page shows copyright violation (failure to ''attribute'') of CC-BY-SA and should therefore be deleted.
::: If you, James, remove the copyright violation tagging, I will understand it as you taking responsibility for a possible copyright violation and I will probably disengage (or do I have a duty to take more pains and try to override your assessment?) --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:31, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::: As for "As i explained, Wikipedia use a free-to-use policy": that seems to be a misunderstanding or too vague understanding; Wikipedia uses CC-BY-SA copyright license, which requires proper ''attribution'' of authorship, which could have been done in the edit summary that created the article, but was not done. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:35, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] It has already been added, as you would have seen upon checking. I would still appreciate a response to the other points I mentioned earlier, if you are willing to continue the discussion. If not, your choise. CC:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Cheers[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:08, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
: James, as my mentor in my role of a custodian, if you want me to do something, or if you have a recommendation for me, please let me know on my talk page. I am struggling to figure out how to navigate these waters. You can also use email if it seems better from some perspective. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 10:21, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] Why not take a step back? I offered you a solution and a possibility to cooperate instead of continuing a conflict. I still believe that working together is more productive than arguing over small details. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:26, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
:::The discussion at this talk page ended not very fruitfully.
:::Pitty, i really tried to make piece.
:::Yet I am not the only one complainting about Dan’s behaviour.
:::
:::Anything I can do (or you) ?
:::Am I free to remove remarks and/or tags?
:::I dont want to end up in an editwar.
:::
:::Sorry to have asked so much of your time [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 15:54, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
Thanks, both. May I suggest:
* {{ping|Harold Foppele}}: Any text you don't write yourself needs appropriate attribution or removal, otherwise it runs the risk of copyright violation. For example, this message appears on each edit source screen underneath the edit summary box: "Do not copy text from other websites without permission. It will be deleted." If text is copied from Wikipedia it needs to be acknowledged as such because it is licensed under CC-by-SA which allows re-use but requires acknowledgement. Such acknowledgement could be made in the edit summary when the contribution is first made. If not, then the next best could be to put quotation marks around copied text and a link to the source(s) of the text.
* {{ping|Dan Polansky}}: Appreciate your administrative work. Let's try to AGF and work constructively with new users who are learning how to contribute. Wikiversity is a learning environment.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 20:42, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Thank you very much. I hope it will work out since Dan does not respond, to me that is. Could you find time to look at the revised [[User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size]] i made additions to it, but since it is a mix of WP, other sources and OR, it is alomost impossible to keep quoting. So i made a general intro. Is that enough? Also 99% of the [[]] refer directly to WP since WV does not have most of the words/pages. I also recreated the template so that it shows all original text/items. The new section ==Tunneling== is not cited yet, but it wiil be when I have time. Can I remove the tags myself? Thanks again [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:21, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::Looks like a solid chunk is copied from Wikipedia: https://www.copyscape.com/view.php?o=4829&u=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMesoscopic_physics&t=1760433515&s=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikiversity.org%2Fwiki%2FUser%3AHarold_Foppele%2FQuantum_A_Matter_Of_Size&w=66&i=1&r=10
::without appropriate acknowledgement.
::Some ways to deal with this appropriately include:
::# Acknowledge the source in the edit summary when content is added to the page
::# Using quotation marks and citations to indicate the source of any content which you haven't authored yourself
::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:02, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::The "chunk" is correct :) I took that since it fits perfect to the article. At the top of the page I quoted:
:::{Wikipedia [[wikipedia:Mesoscopic_physics|Mesoscopic physics]]<nowiki>}}</nowiki>
:::[[creativecommons:by-sa/4.0/|License CC-BY-SA 4.0]]
:::In Edit summary: The first section of this article is copied from Wikipedia "Mesoscopic physics"
:::Is that sufficient ?
:::I did cite almost everything what is not so much requested in Wikiversity as far as i found out, but is a first requirement in Wikipedia.
:::Is it OK if I remove the tags ? Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:51, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
::::I think it would be more transparent and demonstrate greater academic integrity to use quotation marks for text which is copied from elsewhere, especially because there was no appropriate edit summary when the text was added to the page.
::::[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User%3AHarold_Foppele%2FQuantum_A_Matter_Of_Size&diff=2760582&oldid=2760574 Example of how this might be done].
::::I don't suggest removing the copyright tag until copied text is more clearly quoted and cited and there is consensus that it [[wikt:pass muster|passes muster]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::Thank you SO MUCH !! I had no idea that a <blockquote existed nor what it does. This is the first time i used a Wikipedia copy into Wikiversity. So a simple explanation, as you gave me now, would have prevented all this. :) I changed the layout a bit to make it view nicer. Is this required also for my own publications on Wikipedia? Thanks again!! and a goodnight to you [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:28, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
::::::I decided to re-write the copyrighted text in my own words. It feels better this way, what do you think? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 13:07, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::Great, I think that makes a big difference to rewrite in your own words. I've removed the copyright tag.
:::::::Let me know if I can do anything else as you go along. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:03, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::: The page still contains copyright violation. I am starting to track problems at [[User:Dan Polansky/Problem reports (about Wikiversity problems)]]. I will disengage from Harold Foppele; this is not being productive and can lead to my harm and thereby harm to the English Wikiversity. I have seen this kind of people elsewhere: I explained a class/type of a problem to the person and pointed to an example for clarity and the person corrected just the single item I gave as an example. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 04:17, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] Since you want to take this personally instead of having a civilized conversation, I will not engage in a mud-throwing contest or labeling people as “this kind of people". I saw your problem report and I seriously question your objectivity as a science debater. You took ONE paragraph from an article—a paragraph that had been modified (as your question mark even shows)—plus a scientific debate over a previously accepted article on Wikipedia. You completely ignored the accepted contributions I have made to Wikipedia. Yet this alone is enough for you to request that a contributor be blocked.
:::::::::What do I gain from spending hours and hours doing research for a new article? Hours and hours searching for proper references? Hours writing and rewriting the text? How much do I get paid? Nothing. How much honor or credit do I receive? None. So what "kind of people" am I? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 08:21, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::: DFX. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:26, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::::Exactly my point. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:19, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold]] and [[User:Dan Polansky|Dan]] — I appreciate your considerations and communications. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:51, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
== Peer review ==
@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Hello James, I hope you are doing well. The 2 articles I wrote are now ready to be published. Is there some kind of peer review possible? I tried to find some help at [[Portal:Particle physics]] but all data there is very old. How can we move forward from this? Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:52, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:Perhaps try [[Wikiversity:Colloquium]] - that's the general way to communicate with English Wikiversity users/editors. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:08, 17 October 2025 (UTC)
== Hello James, I need your help. ==
Could join the discussion with us in [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Concern regarding curator conduct User:Dan Polansky]]
We would like to solicit your input on this matter. [[User:Tomlovesfar|Tomlovesfar]] ([[User talk:Tomlovesfar|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tomlovesfar|contribs]]) 03:54, 17 October 2025 (UTC)
== Quantum ==
Hello James, If you have time could you lease look at [[Quantum]]. An essay like page with simple information, that might attract students. I Know its not your field, but maybe it appeals to you. Thanks, [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 23:39, 18 October 2025 (UTC)
== ShakespeareFan00 ==
Goodevening, please, if you have time, take a look at the edits made by this user. A few hundred in 2 days ! Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 20:35, 31 October 2025 (UTC)
== When is a quote or blockquote needed? ==
Hi James, I hope you are doing well. I did wrote some articles and parts off them at Wikipedia. If i want to use parts of it at Wikiversity do i still need to quote that parts? Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 11:19, 2 November 2025 (UTC)
:Basically, if you didn't author text which is being added, then the genesis of the text needs to be made clear (e.g, edit summary, quotation etc.) It is also possible to import pages (e.g., from Wikipedia) which brings in the full edit history. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:38, 3 November 2025 (UTC)
== Publishing transcripts ==
Hi James, Is it allowed to publish a transcript in Wikiversity as per my example at [[User:Harold Foppele/sandbox-2]]. If not, then I remove the page ofcourse. I think it could be nice if I edit it to make it easy accessible in various Wikipages.
But again, if its not allowed, i remove it. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 11:28, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
== User:Dan Polansky ==
@Jtneill , Hi James, You are a curator/bureaucrat, if i'm not mistaken. Please look at: [[User:Dan Polansky/Problem reports (about Wikiversity problems)]] I feel outright insulted and ask you (if you can) to put an end to it. Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:59, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
: I wrote: "The user account created articles in the subject of quantum mechanics that use wiki-voice and do not state the author. Since it is very likely that he does not understand quantum mechanics as per evidence in the revision history of his user talk page, it is also likely that they contain countless errors. The articles are presented to the reader as valid referenced content, not as one person's exercise in who-knows-what. Preventing the user account from creating new pages and moving all his articles to user space would address the issue."
: I think it is accurate. By now, we have enough evidence I think that the user account is a troll account, an intentional disruptor. There are multiple behavioral signs, both in Wikipedia and in Wikiversity.
: I propose an indef block of the user account. An alternative is not to feed into this troll account. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 18:03, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::Well well here we go again [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 18:18, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::: I opened [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Indefinite block for Harold_Foppele]]. I fear it will be in vain. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 18:26, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::::You are allowed to hope [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 18:42, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
== Moving to personal namespace ==
What are the policies or customs on Wikiversity for moving pages to personal userspace? Isn't there a risk that Wikiversity will turn into a blogging platform where many users will cultivate pages in their userspace and the outside world will not benefit from it?
I see moving to ns user as a frequent suggestion in Requests for deletion (RFD). I would understand moving to ns Draft, which is clearly defined and there is a chance that the resource will then get into the main ns, thus serving the community. I would understand the suggestion to move to another wikiproject, where the text will serve the community. But I don't really understand the frequent moves to personal ns. Since it's in the RFD, it should either be kept or deleted. If someone contributes to Wikiversity, they automatically agree to its policies and also to the fact that they don't own the pages and someone can put them up for deletion. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:36, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
I personally don't need a free website to host my pages. How would I get rid of the unfinished [[Pomology]] meta course if it was moved to my NS? ([https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Requests_for_Deletion#c-Dan_Polansky-20251121091100-Juandev-20251120220900 Moving it to my own NS is suggested in RFD]). I'm putting it in the Request for deletion because, even though I started it, it looks like other editors had significant input there. Will I have the right to request speedy deletion if the pages are moved to my user ns?
I think this tactic of moving to personal space is poorly thought out, but it has become the norm.
Is there any guideline or discussion from before? If something appears in a deletion request, the majority decides that it should be moved to user ns, how can the person in question defend themselves that they don't want it in their own ns? It seems the community is pressuring the original author to agree to deletion. It seems that the user ns is an untouchable territory into which the community has the right to throw whatever it thinks from the main ns. So why aren't those pages deleted when the community decides that they don't belong in the main ns? --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:30, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
{{ping|Juandev}} I replied on your talk page. But here's another version: Personally, in general, I try to keep my notes etc. in user space. Then if I have something more developed to share and collaborate on, then main space. Draft could be helpful to keep main space tidy, but is very quiet/unused, so in reality most drafts are in main space. But if the content is dubious, underdeveloped, lacking citation/peer review etc. then delete, or user space if it could still be developed. That's roughly how I see it. But everyone has a slightly different view/preference, so discuss to develop consensus. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:48, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
== Ninefold Resonance Theory ==
Dear Jtneill, I noticed that when you deleted [[Ninefold Resonance Theory]], you accidentally deleted the article in my own user space as well. However, I got the impression that most users felt that it should be allowed to exist in my own user space. I thought long and hard about my theory and I'm disappointed that it's gone now... Could you move the article back to my own user space, so not in the main space? I look forward to hearing from you! Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:22, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
:Nevermind. I will move all my ideas to everybodywiki.com. 😄 Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:36, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
::Could you please e-mail me the source code of the deleted page? Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:42, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
:[[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]]: Apologies, the user page version was accidentally deleted. It has now been restored. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
::Thank you! ☺️ Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:58, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
:::All pages in my user space have been moved to EverybodyWiki. Could you perhaps delete all the pages with the {{tl|speedy}} template on it? Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 07:08, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
::::[[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]]: The main space redirects and all your user sub-pages have been deleted. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 1 December 2025 (UTC)
:::::Thank you! Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 08:24, 1 December 2025 (UTC)
== Vandalism ==
{{ping|Jtneill}} May I draw your attantion to this!
==== 6 December 2025 ====
* cur[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&diff=prev&oldid=2778412 prev] <bdi>[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&oldid=2778412 13:15, 6 December 2025]</bdi> [[User:Revolving Doormat|<bdi>Revolving Doormat</bdi>]] [[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]] 75,351 bytes +279 request speedy delete under CSD1 [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&action=edit&undoafter=2777042&undo=2778412 undo][[Special:Thanks/2778412|thank]] [[Special:Tags|Tag]]: [[Wikiversity:VisualEditor|Visual edit: Switched]]
[[User:Revolving Doormat|<bdi>Revolving Doormat</bdi>]] account created today
at the same time as = <bdi>~2025-38873-79</bdi> =
So I assume they are all the same.
Am I allowed to remove the delete template by myself?
Greetings [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 16:41, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:We are not the same person. I came here from an AfD on Wikipedia and your page creation ban here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents#c-Ldm1954-20251205133800-Requesting_page_creation_block_of_User:Harold_Foppele
:The temp user already identified that I notified WP about the same activity on WV, and that brought them here. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 17:08, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::Its so coincidental that you all share the same IP range isn't it? Using an empty account? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:19, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:::The user already identified their WP account and my WP user id is the same one I have here. I don't believe you have access to our IP addresses, but but based on their WP biography, that would also be impossible. I will not be engaging with you further. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 17:25, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::::What you believe or not is up to you [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:41, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
== User Dan Polansky ==
I want to draw your attention to the edits (mainly copy/paste) by [[user:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] today. Still trying to act as curator? They continue their previous harassment. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:07, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
== Happy New Year, Jtneill! ==
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'''Jtneill''',<br />Have a prosperous, productive and enjoyable [[New Year]], and thanks for your contributions to Wikiversity.
<br />[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:10, 2 January 2026 (UTC)<br /><br />
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''{{resize|88%|Send New Year cheer by adding {{tls|Happy New Year fireworks}} to user talk pages.}}''
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== Please delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]] ==
Reason: This is a request by the author (major contributor). Custodians don't have interface admin rights, so custodians cannot delete this page. Bureaucrats can delete this page by temporarily adding themselves to the interface admin user group ([[User_talk:Jtneill/Archive/2024#Please_delete_MediaWiki:Wikidebate.js]]). Thank you for your attention. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 09:11, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
== DELETE request ==
Please DELETE [[Creating Media Literacy and You/Fox, the Great Depression, the Great Recession, and our future]] to [[Media Literacy and You/Fox, the Great Depression, the Great Recession, and our future]]. I created the article with an erroneous name. I will recreate it with the name I want. Thanks, [[User:DavidMCEddy|DavidMCEddy]] ([[User talk:DavidMCEddy|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/DavidMCEddy|contribs]]) 20:15, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
: {{Done}} [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 13:12, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
== Archiving ==
Hi and hello @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I did some archiving from Colloquium and RCA. If you have time that I'm on the right track? It where only a few, so if I did wrong, its easily undone, otherwise I continue as per request. Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 19:21, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] Please remember to user <nowiki>{{archive|Wikiversity:Colloquium}}</nowiki> instead of <nowiki>{{archive}}</nowiki> so that people who find themselves in the archives know where to go if they are unsure of anything. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 07:12, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] I have literally no idea what you are talking about. So elaborate please. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 08:53, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::Ahhh I see what you mean. Strange that you comment on MY edits only. NONE of the archive templates at WC archive have that. Did you overlook that?[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:13, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::::That’s why the discussion parameter is red linked, I am working on that. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:22, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::::Well, you could have said that instead. I think it's a bit overdone, since the page title is reads already Archive. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:26, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::::::New users will click on the red linked, which brings them to create the talk page, which is not watched so they won’t receive a response to their question. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:15, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::::::That is true [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:58, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
== Email ==
I sent you an email about a private abuse filter, feel free to take a look. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:39, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
== AI slop, ownership, and wikilawyering. ==
Using AI images is worse than no images. Your constant reverting of reasonable edits removing images you prompted on pages you wrote would be considered [[w:wp:OWN]]ership on Wikipedia; even if there is no general guideline on Wikiversity the spirit of not having the final say because just you made the page is applicable to all Wikimedia wikis. Reverting a reasonable edit because it lacks an image seems like [[w:wp:WIKILAWYER]]ing— I don’t know if edit summaries are ''required'' here, but I doubt it, and on most wikis they are simply recommended. Not having one doesn’t invalidate the edit. [[User:Dronebogus|Dronebogus]] ([[User talk:Dronebogus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dronebogus|contribs]]) 05:27, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
:I understand that you don't like many AI images because you consider them slop. My view is that some of these AI images can be useful for educational purposes.
:I understand that you think an alternative or no image is better than some AI images. My view is that some AI images are better than no image and are either useful in addition to alternative images or more useful than some alternatives.
:May I suggest deciding first on Commons whether to keep an image, rather than removing from Wikiversity and then nominating for deletion on Commons because of no use.
:I have no interest in edit warring. I'll invite [[WV:RCA]] to review your recent edits. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:20, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== You may be an eligible candidate for the U4C election ==
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Greetings,
The [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee|Universal Code of Conduct Coordinating Committee (U4C)]] seeks candidates for the 2026 election. The U4C is the global committee responsible for overseeing enforcement of the [[foundation:Special:MyLanguage/Policy:Universal Code of Conduct|Universal Code of Conduct]]. Elections are held annually, if elected a committee member serves for two years.
This year the U4C requires candidates to hold administrator rights on at least one wiki, which is why you are being contacted as you appear to hold this right. There are other requirements, such as candidates must be at least 18 years old and may not be employed by the Wikimedia Foundation or other related chapters and affiliates. You can find more information in the [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee/Election/2026#Call_for_Candidates|call for candidates on Meta-wiki]]. Additionally, the committee's working language is English; some ability to communicate in English is required.
The election opens on 18 May, if you are eligible and interested you have until 10 May to submit your candidacy. There will week between for candidates to answer questions from the community. Voting takes place privately in [[m:Special:MyLanguage/SecurePoll|SecurePoll]], successful candidates must receive at least 60% support. More information is available on [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee/Election/2026|the 2026 Elections page]], including timelines and other candidacy information. If you read over the material and consider yourself qualified, please consider submitting your name to run for the committee. If you think someone else in your community might be interested and qualified, please encourage them to run.
In partnership with the U4C -- [[m:User:Keegan (WMF)|Keegan (WMF)]] ([[m:User_talk:Keegan (WMF)|talk]]) 18:32, 28 April 2026 (UTC) </div>
<!-- Message sent by User:Keegan (WMF)@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Keegan_(WMF)/test&oldid=30471751 -->
== Thoughts about Wikinews closure ==
I think Wikiversity could bring in Wikinews users possibly. Thoughts? @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 23:05, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:Welcome. Sorry for the loss of Wikinews. I hope WN editors can find their way into contributing to WMF sister projects most aligned with their interests and skills, including Wikiversity. For me, the key here is alignment with [[Wikiversity:Mission]]. It may take some time to work out what's possible. As @[[User:Koavf|koavf]] suggests, a good place to start could be building on [[:Category:Journalism]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:22, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
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== Your feedback is welcome at [[User talk:Username142857]] ==
Dear my mentor, I believe we have already seen [[User:Username142857]] making too many non-Wikiversity questions at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/MathXplore]] and [[Wikiversity talk:Custodianship/Archive 6]]. In the beginning, I answered them one by one as part of demonstrating my competency to answer questions as a custodian candidate (and they were somewhat related to my global contributions) and courtesy to discussion participants. However, by facing [[special:diff/2631774]] and [[special:diff/2618170]] (editing discussion archives, re-opening closed discussions), I started to believe that we should bring an end to their excessive non-Wikiversity usage of Wikiversity (talk) namespaces. According to [[:w:User talk:Username142857]] (especially [[:w:special:diff/1073391896]]), [[User:Username142857]] is evaluated as {{tq|the other editors are tired to waste their time to read and answer your non-useful edits.}} and I think they are doing the similar thing at Wikiversity. Our community may have limited tolerance for such behavior. If you had any experience of handling such issues in the past, your feedback may be helpful to allow [[User:Username142857]] to improve their behavior. Thank you for your attention and mentoring. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 03:21, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
: {{ping|MathXplore}} Thanks for the heads up. Sorry for slow response. I'm recovering from COVID, but on way back. Thankyou for your very patient, clear, and supportive feedback on Username142857's talk page which, along with Mikeu, seems to have communicated the concerns and hopefully lead to a change/improvement in behaviour. What a great example of handling challenging behaviour courteously. Fingers crossed. Keep well. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:39, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
== [[:b:Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Free will and neuroscience]] ==
Hello, can this be related to your project? Should this be imported here? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 12:10, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
: Sorry, the page has been deleted, should we request temporary restoration for import, or should we just ask the author to resubmit to Wikiversity? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 12:29, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
::Thank-you for pointing this out. Yes, it does look like one of my students' editing. It is a little puzzling how the user ended up on Wikibooks. It is OK that that the wikibooks page has been deleted because the user also appears to be underway here: [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Free will and neuroscience]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:53, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
== [[Template:Subst:ME/BCS]] ==
Hello, should this template be kept for your project? [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 11:42, 31 July 2024 (UTC)
:Yes, please - but it could be moved from Template into a subpage of [[Motivation and emotion]]. Note that we are actively using the template at the moment to help build out the [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024]] pages. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:43, 1 August 2024 (UTC)
== [[:File:Rejection sensitivity chart.webp]] ==
One of your students uploaded this image to Commons as part of [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Rejection sensitivity]]. Unfortunately, it's meaningless AI-generated sludge. Can this image be removed from the chapter to allow it to be deleted from Commons?
(You may want to have a word with your students about AI-generated content; I think some of the text in this chapter was generated by ChatGPT as well.) [[User:Omphalographer|Omphalographer]] ([[User talk:Omphalographer|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Omphalographer|contribs]]) 02:52, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
: {{ping|Omphalographer}} Great, thanks for picking this up and letting me know. Yes please, delete. I've given the student a heads-up here: [[User talk:Yonis Yousufzai]]. We're covering genAI in classes this week {{smile}}. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
== [[Wikiversity:Bots/Status#Leaderbot]] ==
Hi, is there a chance you can approve this bot request (or otherwise let me know if there are any issues)? Thanks in advance. [[User:Leaderboard|Leaderboard]] ([[User talk:Leaderboard|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leaderboard|contribs]]) 15:03, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
== VDT - U3126684 chapter ==
Hi James ! I saw you added the hanging indent which is amazing, thank you so much! However, I had a few references missing and I tried to add them in but they didn't keep the required APA formatting. I deleted the template and reused the hanging indent template but it won't keep any formatting. Can you please help me fix it?
[[Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Vulnerable dark triad, motivation, and emotion|Motivation and emotion/Book/2024/Vulnerable dark triad, motivation, and emotion - Wikiversity]] [[User:U3126684|U3126684]] ([[User talk:U3126684|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/U3126684|contribs]]) 11:16, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:James, I figured it out! I was just missing the "}}" at the end of the text... all solved! [[User:U3126684|U3126684]] ([[User talk:U3126684|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/U3126684|contribs]]) 11:31, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
== Your feedback may be needed at [[User talk:Tule-hog]] ==
Hello, user:Dan Polansky is currently communicating with a participant on this talk page. As Dan's mentor, I thought you may want to provide feedback so I came here for a notice. ({{ping|Guy vandegrift}} Your feedback is also welcome). [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 06:20, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
:Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I will keep up with further developments. [[User:Guy vandegrift|Guy vandegrift]] ([[User talk:Guy vandegrift|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Guy vandegrift|contribs]]) 00:07, 8 October 2024 (UTC)
== [[General health and well-being]] ==
This page was in the proposed-deletion state for over 3 months, with no opposition. Should I feel free to delete the page? I guess it seemed to be a good idea back in 2011 (at least as a stub to get things started), but no one expanded it into anything really useful during all these years. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 11:24, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
:Hi Dan - thanks for checking - yes, it can go - I've removed the one incoming link to this page. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:39, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
== Enquiry about Correct Setup of Wikiversity? ==
Hi James,
I just had a few questions regarding my Setup on Wikiversity:
1. We are asked to enable the Visual Editor. Have I done this correctly? Or how do I do it if I have not?
2. Have I chosen a book chapter and inserted my name correctly?
3. There isn’t a discussion forum page on our UCLearn for me to comment on, for the assessment, so where should I comment?
Thank you, I look forward to hearing back from you.
[[User:Hcoad|Hcoad]] ([[User talk:Hcoad|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Hcoad|contribs]]) 14:27, 2 August 2025 (UTC)
:@[[User:Hcoad|Hcoad]]:
:# To access the Visual Editor, use "Create" for the first edit on a page, or "Edit" thereafter
:# Sign-up looks good
:# You can create a new discussion thread on UCLearn about a topic of interest or respond to existing threads such as "What do you really want to learn about?"
:-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:34, 2 August 2025 (UTC)
== Problem with curator ==
Reading above, may i address you as James? If so, hello James, i have a problem with a curator and would ask if you are a contact to talk about it. If not, sorry to bother you. Kind regards, [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:19, 10 October 2025 (UTC)
:Hi Harold,
:Thanks for getting in touch.
:Sorry about the teething issues in getting underway with your contributions to Wikiversity.
:Let's hopefully have a constructive discussion here, which you've initiated: [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Contest removal of article]]
:Sincerely,
:James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:38, 11 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Hi James,
::Thank you very much for sending me the article text, I really appriciate that. If not to much to ask, could you also send me the template? Template:Condensed matter physics see: User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size.
::Did you read the disucussion with Dan Polansky? I think its rather weird. I answered all his questions truthfully, since i have nothing to hide. (see my user page) And than he started some trivia about the double slit expiriment, went on without listening. Like the article was a sort of explosive that must be removed ASAP. That is not the way a curator should behave (my opinion).
::I could acctually use a mentor physics to avoid mistakes in the future.
::I know both my articles have flaws but i can fix that in time.
::Do you maybe have suggestions?
::Last but not least, thanks again for the time you took to help me !!! Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:14, 12 October 2025 (UTC)
: @James: To reduce or eliminate further risk that I am abusing my curator priviledges in relation to suspected copyright violation (I don't think I am, but my point of view can be skewed), I can start tagging material for copyright violation using a template (does not require curator privileges). That should address concerns? --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:01, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] As long as you remove the insulting (in my opinion) remarks on both articles and remove the tag -since it does not violate '''[[creativecommons:by-sa/3.0/|CC-BY-SA 4.0]] license'''- i will be satisfied. As i explained, Wikipedia use a free-to-use policy. Also could you please clarify this code: <nowiki>{{subst:</nowiki>[[Template:No thanks|no thanks]]|pg=User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size|url=<nowiki>{{{url}}}</nowiki>}} [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • . After this is resolved i'm willing to consider this complaint closed. Maybe we can start over with a new and different conversation, since I strongly believe in AGF. You have a way much longer experience on Wikiversity than I do, so perhaps you could help me in a friendly and constructive way? It seems we have a lot in common and I shall gladly listen to any comments.
::CC @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:16, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::: The page [[User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size]] currently features multiple sentences from a CC-BY-SA source without using quotation marks. My determination is that the page shows copyright violation (failure to ''attribute'') of CC-BY-SA and should therefore be deleted.
::: If you, James, remove the copyright violation tagging, I will understand it as you taking responsibility for a possible copyright violation and I will probably disengage (or do I have a duty to take more pains and try to override your assessment?) --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:31, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::: As for "As i explained, Wikipedia use a free-to-use policy": that seems to be a misunderstanding or too vague understanding; Wikipedia uses CC-BY-SA copyright license, which requires proper ''attribution'' of authorship, which could have been done in the edit summary that created the article, but was not done. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:35, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] It has already been added, as you would have seen upon checking. I would still appreciate a response to the other points I mentioned earlier, if you are willing to continue the discussion. If not, your choise. CC:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Cheers[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:08, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
: James, as my mentor in my role of a custodian, if you want me to do something, or if you have a recommendation for me, please let me know on my talk page. I am struggling to figure out how to navigate these waters. You can also use email if it seems better from some perspective. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 10:21, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] Why not take a step back? I offered you a solution and a possibility to cooperate instead of continuing a conflict. I still believe that working together is more productive than arguing over small details. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:26, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
:::The discussion at this talk page ended not very fruitfully.
:::Pitty, i really tried to make piece.
:::Yet I am not the only one complainting about Dan’s behaviour.
:::
:::Anything I can do (or you) ?
:::Am I free to remove remarks and/or tags?
:::I dont want to end up in an editwar.
:::
:::Sorry to have asked so much of your time [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 15:54, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
Thanks, both. May I suggest:
* {{ping|Harold Foppele}}: Any text you don't write yourself needs appropriate attribution or removal, otherwise it runs the risk of copyright violation. For example, this message appears on each edit source screen underneath the edit summary box: "Do not copy text from other websites without permission. It will be deleted." If text is copied from Wikipedia it needs to be acknowledged as such because it is licensed under CC-by-SA which allows re-use but requires acknowledgement. Such acknowledgement could be made in the edit summary when the contribution is first made. If not, then the next best could be to put quotation marks around copied text and a link to the source(s) of the text.
* {{ping|Dan Polansky}}: Appreciate your administrative work. Let's try to AGF and work constructively with new users who are learning how to contribute. Wikiversity is a learning environment.
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 20:42, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Thank you very much. I hope it will work out since Dan does not respond, to me that is. Could you find time to look at the revised [[User:Harold Foppele/Quantum A Matter Of Size]] i made additions to it, but since it is a mix of WP, other sources and OR, it is alomost impossible to keep quoting. So i made a general intro. Is that enough? Also 99% of the [[]] refer directly to WP since WV does not have most of the words/pages. I also recreated the template so that it shows all original text/items. The new section ==Tunneling== is not cited yet, but it wiil be when I have time. Can I remove the tags myself? Thanks again [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:21, 13 October 2025 (UTC)
::Looks like a solid chunk is copied from Wikipedia: https://www.copyscape.com/view.php?o=4829&u=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMesoscopic_physics&t=1760433515&s=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikiversity.org%2Fwiki%2FUser%3AHarold_Foppele%2FQuantum_A_Matter_Of_Size&w=66&i=1&r=10
::without appropriate acknowledgement.
::Some ways to deal with this appropriately include:
::# Acknowledge the source in the edit summary when content is added to the page
::# Using quotation marks and citations to indicate the source of any content which you haven't authored yourself
::-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:02, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::The "chunk" is correct :) I took that since it fits perfect to the article. At the top of the page I quoted:
:::{Wikipedia [[wikipedia:Mesoscopic_physics|Mesoscopic physics]]<nowiki>}}</nowiki>
:::[[creativecommons:by-sa/4.0/|License CC-BY-SA 4.0]]
:::In Edit summary: The first section of this article is copied from Wikipedia "Mesoscopic physics"
:::Is that sufficient ?
:::I did cite almost everything what is not so much requested in Wikiversity as far as i found out, but is a first requirement in Wikipedia.
:::Is it OK if I remove the tags ? Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 10:51, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
::::I think it would be more transparent and demonstrate greater academic integrity to use quotation marks for text which is copied from elsewhere, especially because there was no appropriate edit summary when the text was added to the page.
::::[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User%3AHarold_Foppele%2FQuantum_A_Matter_Of_Size&diff=2760582&oldid=2760574 Example of how this might be done].
::::I don't suggest removing the copyright tag until copied text is more clearly quoted and cited and there is consensus that it [[wikt:pass muster|passes muster]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:52, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::Thank you SO MUCH !! I had no idea that a <blockquote existed nor what it does. This is the first time i used a Wikipedia copy into Wikiversity. So a simple explanation, as you gave me now, would have prevented all this. :) I changed the layout a bit to make it view nicer. Is this required also for my own publications on Wikipedia? Thanks again!! and a goodnight to you [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:28, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
::::::I decided to re-write the copyrighted text in my own words. It feels better this way, what do you think? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 13:07, 14 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::Great, I think that makes a big difference to rewrite in your own words. I've removed the copyright tag.
:::::::Let me know if I can do anything else as you go along. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:03, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::: The page still contains copyright violation. I am starting to track problems at [[User:Dan Polansky/Problem reports (about Wikiversity problems)]]. I will disengage from Harold Foppele; this is not being productive and can lead to my harm and thereby harm to the English Wikiversity. I have seen this kind of people elsewhere: I explained a class/type of a problem to the person and pointed to an example for clarity and the person corrected just the single item I gave as an example. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 04:17, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::@[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] Since you want to take this personally instead of having a civilized conversation, I will not engage in a mud-throwing contest or labeling people as “this kind of people". I saw your problem report and I seriously question your objectivity as a science debater. You took ONE paragraph from an article—a paragraph that had been modified (as your question mark even shows)—plus a scientific debate over a previously accepted article on Wikipedia. You completely ignored the accepted contributions I have made to Wikipedia. Yet this alone is enough for you to request that a contributor be blocked.
:::::::::What do I gain from spending hours and hours doing research for a new article? Hours and hours searching for proper references? Hours writing and rewriting the text? How much do I get paid? Nothing. How much honor or credit do I receive? None. So what "kind of people" am I? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 08:21, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::: DFX. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:26, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::::Exactly my point. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:19, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
:Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold]] and [[User:Dan Polansky|Dan]] — I appreciate your considerations and communications. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:51, 15 October 2025 (UTC)
== Peer review ==
@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Hello James, I hope you are doing well. The 2 articles I wrote are now ready to be published. Is there some kind of peer review possible? I tried to find some help at [[Portal:Particle physics]] but all data there is very old. How can we move forward from this? Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:52, 16 October 2025 (UTC)
:Perhaps try [[Wikiversity:Colloquium]] - that's the general way to communicate with English Wikiversity users/editors. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:08, 17 October 2025 (UTC)
== Hello James, I need your help. ==
Could join the discussion with us in [[Wikiversity:Colloquium#Concern regarding curator conduct User:Dan Polansky]]
We would like to solicit your input on this matter. [[User:Tomlovesfar|Tomlovesfar]] ([[User talk:Tomlovesfar|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tomlovesfar|contribs]]) 03:54, 17 October 2025 (UTC)
== Quantum ==
Hello James, If you have time could you lease look at [[Quantum]]. An essay like page with simple information, that might attract students. I Know its not your field, but maybe it appeals to you. Thanks, [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 23:39, 18 October 2025 (UTC)
== ShakespeareFan00 ==
Goodevening, please, if you have time, take a look at the edits made by this user. A few hundred in 2 days ! Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 20:35, 31 October 2025 (UTC)
== When is a quote or blockquote needed? ==
Hi James, I hope you are doing well. I did wrote some articles and parts off them at Wikipedia. If i want to use parts of it at Wikiversity do i still need to quote that parts? Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 11:19, 2 November 2025 (UTC)
:Basically, if you didn't author text which is being added, then the genesis of the text needs to be made clear (e.g, edit summary, quotation etc.) It is also possible to import pages (e.g., from Wikipedia) which brings in the full edit history. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:38, 3 November 2025 (UTC)
== Publishing transcripts ==
Hi James, Is it allowed to publish a transcript in Wikiversity as per my example at [[User:Harold Foppele/sandbox-2]]. If not, then I remove the page ofcourse. I think it could be nice if I edit it to make it easy accessible in various Wikipages.
But again, if its not allowed, i remove it. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 11:28, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
== User:Dan Polansky ==
@Jtneill , Hi James, You are a curator/bureaucrat, if i'm not mistaken. Please look at: [[User:Dan Polansky/Problem reports (about Wikiversity problems)]] I feel outright insulted and ask you (if you can) to put an end to it. Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:59, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
: I wrote: "The user account created articles in the subject of quantum mechanics that use wiki-voice and do not state the author. Since it is very likely that he does not understand quantum mechanics as per evidence in the revision history of his user talk page, it is also likely that they contain countless errors. The articles are presented to the reader as valid referenced content, not as one person's exercise in who-knows-what. Preventing the user account from creating new pages and moving all his articles to user space would address the issue."
: I think it is accurate. By now, we have enough evidence I think that the user account is a troll account, an intentional disruptor. There are multiple behavioral signs, both in Wikipedia and in Wikiversity.
: I propose an indef block of the user account. An alternative is not to feed into this troll account. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 18:03, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::Well well here we go again [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 18:18, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::: I opened [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#Indefinite block for Harold_Foppele]]. I fear it will be in vain. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 18:26, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
::::You are allowed to hope [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 18:42, 6 November 2025 (UTC)
== Moving to personal namespace ==
What are the policies or customs on Wikiversity for moving pages to personal userspace? Isn't there a risk that Wikiversity will turn into a blogging platform where many users will cultivate pages in their userspace and the outside world will not benefit from it?
I see moving to ns user as a frequent suggestion in Requests for deletion (RFD). I would understand moving to ns Draft, which is clearly defined and there is a chance that the resource will then get into the main ns, thus serving the community. I would understand the suggestion to move to another wikiproject, where the text will serve the community. But I don't really understand the frequent moves to personal ns. Since it's in the RFD, it should either be kept or deleted. If someone contributes to Wikiversity, they automatically agree to its policies and also to the fact that they don't own the pages and someone can put them up for deletion. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:36, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
I personally don't need a free website to host my pages. How would I get rid of the unfinished [[Pomology]] meta course if it was moved to my NS? ([https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Requests_for_Deletion#c-Dan_Polansky-20251121091100-Juandev-20251120220900 Moving it to my own NS is suggested in RFD]). I'm putting it in the Request for deletion because, even though I started it, it looks like other editors had significant input there. Will I have the right to request speedy deletion if the pages are moved to my user ns?
I think this tactic of moving to personal space is poorly thought out, but it has become the norm.
Is there any guideline or discussion from before? If something appears in a deletion request, the majority decides that it should be moved to user ns, how can the person in question defend themselves that they don't want it in their own ns? It seems the community is pressuring the original author to agree to deletion. It seems that the user ns is an untouchable territory into which the community has the right to throw whatever it thinks from the main ns. So why aren't those pages deleted when the community decides that they don't belong in the main ns? --[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:30, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
{{ping|Juandev}} I replied on your talk page. But here's another version: Personally, in general, I try to keep my notes etc. in user space. Then if I have something more developed to share and collaborate on, then main space. Draft could be helpful to keep main space tidy, but is very quiet/unused, so in reality most drafts are in main space. But if the content is dubious, underdeveloped, lacking citation/peer review etc. then delete, or user space if it could still be developed. That's roughly how I see it. But everyone has a slightly different view/preference, so discuss to develop consensus. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:48, 22 November 2025 (UTC)
== Ninefold Resonance Theory ==
Dear Jtneill, I noticed that when you deleted [[Ninefold Resonance Theory]], you accidentally deleted the article in my own user space as well. However, I got the impression that most users felt that it should be allowed to exist in my own user space. I thought long and hard about my theory and I'm disappointed that it's gone now... Could you move the article back to my own user space, so not in the main space? I look forward to hearing from you! Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:22, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
:Nevermind. I will move all my ideas to everybodywiki.com. 😄 Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:36, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
::Could you please e-mail me the source code of the deleted page? Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:42, 28 November 2025 (UTC)
:[[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]]: Apologies, the user page version was accidentally deleted. It has now been restored. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
::Thank you! ☺️ Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 06:58, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
:::All pages in my user space have been moved to EverybodyWiki. Could you perhaps delete all the pages with the {{tl|speedy}} template on it? Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 07:08, 29 November 2025 (UTC)
::::[[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]]: The main space redirects and all your user sub-pages have been deleted. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:25, 1 December 2025 (UTC)
:::::Thank you! Kind regards, [[User:S. Perquin|S. Perquin]] ([[User talk:S. Perquin|overleg]] • [[Special:Contributions/S. Perquin|bijdragen]]) 08:24, 1 December 2025 (UTC)
== Vandalism ==
{{ping|Jtneill}} May I draw your attantion to this!
==== 6 December 2025 ====
* cur[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&diff=prev&oldid=2778412 prev] <bdi>[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&oldid=2778412 13:15, 6 December 2025]</bdi> [[User:Revolving Doormat|<bdi>Revolving Doormat</bdi>]] [[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]] 75,351 bytes +279 request speedy delete under CSD1 [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Chaos_Theory_Extended&action=edit&undoafter=2777042&undo=2778412 undo][[Special:Thanks/2778412|thank]] [[Special:Tags|Tag]]: [[Wikiversity:VisualEditor|Visual edit: Switched]]
[[User:Revolving Doormat|<bdi>Revolving Doormat</bdi>]] account created today
at the same time as = <bdi>~2025-38873-79</bdi> =
So I assume they are all the same.
Am I allowed to remove the delete template by myself?
Greetings [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 16:41, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:We are not the same person. I came here from an AfD on Wikipedia and your page creation ban here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents#c-Ldm1954-20251205133800-Requesting_page_creation_block_of_User:Harold_Foppele
:The temp user already identified that I notified WP about the same activity on WV, and that brought them here. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 17:08, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::Its so coincidental that you all share the same IP range isn't it? Using an empty account? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:19, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:::The user already identified their WP account and my WP user id is the same one I have here. I don't believe you have access to our IP addresses, but but based on their WP biography, that would also be impossible. I will not be engaging with you further. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 17:25, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::::What you believe or not is up to you [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:41, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
== User Dan Polansky ==
I want to draw your attention to the edits (mainly copy/paste) by [[user:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] today. Still trying to act as curator? They continue their previous harassment. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:07, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
== Happy New Year, Jtneill! ==
<div style="border: 3px solid #FFD700; background-color: #FFFAF0; padding:0.2em 0.4em; height:auto; min-height:173px; border-radius:1em; {{box-shadow|0.1em|0.1em|0.5em|rgba(0,0,0,0.75)}}<!--
-->" class="plainlinks">
[[File:Everlasting Fireworks looped.gif|left|x173px]][[File:Happy new year 01.svg|x173px|right]]
{{Paragraph break}}
{{Center|{{resize|179%|'''''[[New Year|Happy New Year]]!'''''}}}}
'''Jtneill''',<br />Have a prosperous, productive and enjoyable [[New Year]], and thanks for your contributions to Wikiversity.
<br />[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:10, 2 January 2026 (UTC)<br /><br />
</div>
''{{resize|88%|Send New Year cheer by adding {{tls|Happy New Year fireworks}} to user talk pages.}}''
{{clear}}<!-- From template:Happy New Year fireworks -->
== Please delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]] ==
Reason: This is a request by the author (major contributor). Custodians don't have interface admin rights, so custodians cannot delete this page. Bureaucrats can delete this page by temporarily adding themselves to the interface admin user group ([[User_talk:Jtneill/Archive/2024#Please_delete_MediaWiki:Wikidebate.js]]). Thank you for your attention. [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 09:11, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
== DELETE request ==
Please DELETE [[Creating Media Literacy and You/Fox, the Great Depression, the Great Recession, and our future]] to [[Media Literacy and You/Fox, the Great Depression, the Great Recession, and our future]]. I created the article with an erroneous name. I will recreate it with the name I want. Thanks, [[User:DavidMCEddy|DavidMCEddy]] ([[User talk:DavidMCEddy|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/DavidMCEddy|contribs]]) 20:15, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
: {{Done}} [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 13:12, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
== Archiving ==
Hi and hello @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] I did some archiving from Colloquium and RCA. If you have time that I'm on the right track? It where only a few, so if I did wrong, its easily undone, otherwise I continue as per request. Thanks [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 19:21, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] Please remember to user <nowiki>{{archive|Wikiversity:Colloquium}}</nowiki> instead of <nowiki>{{archive}}</nowiki> so that people who find themselves in the archives know where to go if they are unsure of anything. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 07:12, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::@[[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] I have literally no idea what you are talking about. So elaborate please. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 08:53, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::Ahhh I see what you mean. Strange that you comment on MY edits only. NONE of the archive templates at WC archive have that. Did you overlook that?[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:13, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::::That’s why the discussion parameter is red linked, I am working on that. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:22, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::::Well, you could have said that instead. I think it's a bit overdone, since the page title is reads already Archive. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 09:26, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
::::::New users will click on the red linked, which brings them to create the talk page, which is not watched so they won’t receive a response to their question. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 12:15, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:::::::That is true [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 12:58, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
== Email ==
I sent you an email about a private abuse filter, feel free to take a look. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:39, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
== AI slop, ownership, and wikilawyering. ==
Using AI images is worse than no images. Your constant reverting of reasonable edits removing images you prompted on pages you wrote would be considered [[w:wp:OWN]]ership on Wikipedia; even if there is no general guideline on Wikiversity the spirit of not having the final say because just you made the page is applicable to all Wikimedia wikis. Reverting a reasonable edit because it lacks an image seems like [[w:wp:WIKILAWYER]]ing— I don’t know if edit summaries are ''required'' here, but I doubt it, and on most wikis they are simply recommended. Not having one doesn’t invalidate the edit. [[User:Dronebogus|Dronebogus]] ([[User talk:Dronebogus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dronebogus|contribs]]) 05:27, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
:I understand that you don't like many AI images because you consider them slop. My view is that some of these AI images can be useful for educational purposes.
:I understand that you think an alternative or no image is better than some AI images. My view is that some AI images are better than no image and are either useful in addition to alternative images or more useful than some alternatives.
:May I suggest deciding first on Commons whether to keep an image, rather than removing from Wikiversity and then nominating for deletion on Commons because of no use.
:I have no interest in edit warring. I'll invite [[WV:RCA]] to review your recent edits. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:20, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
== You may be an eligible candidate for the U4C election ==
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Greetings,
The [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee|Universal Code of Conduct Coordinating Committee (U4C)]] seeks candidates for the 2026 election. The U4C is the global committee responsible for overseeing enforcement of the [[foundation:Special:MyLanguage/Policy:Universal Code of Conduct|Universal Code of Conduct]]. Elections are held annually, if elected a committee member serves for two years.
This year the U4C requires candidates to hold administrator rights on at least one wiki, which is why you are being contacted as you appear to hold this right. There are other requirements, such as candidates must be at least 18 years old and may not be employed by the Wikimedia Foundation or other related chapters and affiliates. You can find more information in the [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee/Election/2026#Call_for_Candidates|call for candidates on Meta-wiki]]. Additionally, the committee's working language is English; some ability to communicate in English is required.
The election opens on 18 May, if you are eligible and interested you have until 10 May to submit your candidacy. There will week between for candidates to answer questions from the community. Voting takes place privately in [[m:Special:MyLanguage/SecurePoll|SecurePoll]], successful candidates must receive at least 60% support. More information is available on [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Coordinating_Committee/Election/2026|the 2026 Elections page]], including timelines and other candidacy information. If you read over the material and consider yourself qualified, please consider submitting your name to run for the committee. If you think someone else in your community might be interested and qualified, please encourage them to run.
In partnership with the U4C -- [[m:User:Keegan (WMF)|Keegan (WMF)]] ([[m:User_talk:Keegan (WMF)|talk]]) 18:32, 28 April 2026 (UTC) </div>
<!-- Message sent by User:Keegan (WMF)@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Keegan_(WMF)/test&oldid=30471751 -->
== Thoughts about Wikinews closure ==
I think Wikiversity could bring in Wikinews users possibly. Thoughts? @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 23:05, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:Welcome. Sorry for the loss of Wikinews. I hope WN editors can find their way into contributing to WMF sister projects most aligned with their interests and skills, including Wikiversity. For me, the key here is alignment with [[Wikiversity:Mission]]. It may take some time to work out what's possible. As @[[User:Koavf|koavf]] suggests, a good place to start could be building on [[:Category:Journalism]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:22, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks. [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 23:23, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
i7kj79fw1pnz9xdu7l7x5fxol23e7bv
User:Jtneill/Wikiversity
2
56061
2808995
2808787
2026-05-14T00:09:55Z
Jtneill
10242
/* To sort */
2808995
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{TOCright}}
''A loose, personal (i.e., somewhat idiosynchratic) organisation of Wikiversity-related how-tos and links.''
==To sort==
{|style="background:transparent;"
|valign=top|
* [http://tools.wikimedia.de/~magnus/commonshelper.php commonshelper]
* [[User:Jtneill/Wikification|Wikification]]
* [[w:Help:Interwiki_linking#Project_titles_and_shortcuts|Interwiki linking]]
* [[Wikiversity:Activity bars]]
* [[Wikiversity:Percent complete]]
|valign=top|
* [[Wikiversity:Import|import]]
* [[Wikiversity:Maintenance]]
* [[Wikiversity:Namespaces]]
* [[Wikiversity:Naming conventions]]
|valign=top|
* [[Wikiversity:Participants]]
* [[Wikiversity:Peer review]]
* [[Wikiversity:Review board]]
* [[Wikiversity:Searching]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
|}
==Anchor==
* [[Template:Anchor]], e.g., [[#test]] will go to <code><nowiki>{{anchor|test}}</nowiki></code> or <code><nowiki>{{anchor|anchor=test}}</nowiki></code> (should go to end of page)
==Archiving==
* Example of autoarchiving: [[User talk:Terra]]
==Blogging==
* [[Wikiversity Blog howto]]
==Boxes==
[[User:Jtneill/Sandbox/Tables and boxes]]
The simplest of boxes
{| class="messagebox"
|-
| ABC
XYZ
|}
<blockquote style="padding-left:1.0em; padding-right:1.0em; background-color:#eaf8f4;">
Its good that it works in practice, because it certainly doesn’t work in theory[https://blogs.ch.cam.ac.uk/pmr/2007/10/14/the-thing-about-wikipedia-is-that-it-only-works-in-practice-in-theory-it-can-never-work/]
</blockquote>
==Categories==
It is possible to change the order in which a page’s categories are displayed. By default, categories are displayed in the order they appear in the wikitext. Wikis with a consensus to do so can [[m:Special:MyLanguage/Requesting wiki configuration changes|request]] a configuration change to display them in alphabetical order. [https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T373480]
Using titleparts
<nowiki>[[Category:{{#titleparts:{{PAGENAME}}|1}}]]</nowiki>
==[[/Centering/]]==
{{User:Jtneill/Wikiversity/Centering}}
==Chat==
* [[irc:wikiversity-en|#wikiversity-en]]
==Citations and referencing==
* [[w:Help:Citation tools|Citation tools]]
* [[:Category:Citation templates]]
* [[mw:Help:Cite]]
* [[Template:Citation]]
* [[WV:REF]]
* Example: Outward Bound Process Model<ref>Walsh, V., & Golins, G. L. (1976). ''[http://wilderdom.com/theory/OutwardBoundProcessModel.html The exploration of the Outward Bound process]''. Denver, CO: Colorado Outward Bound School.</ref>
;References
{{reflist|1}}
==Collapse boxes==
{{collapse top|Mary had a little lamb}}
Mary had a little lamb,
Little lamb, little lamb,
Mary had a little lamb,
Its fleece was white as snow
And everywhere that Mary went,
Mary went, Mary went,
Everywhere that Mary went
The lamb was sure to go
It followed her to school one day
School one day, school one day
It followed her to school one day
Which was against the rules.
It made the children laugh and play,
Laugh and play, laugh and play,
It made the children laugh and play
To see a lamb at school
And so the teacher turned it out,
Turned it out, turned it out,
And so the teacher turned it out,
But still it lingered near
And waited patiently about,
Patiently about, patiently about,
And waited patiently about
Till Mary did appear
"Why does the lamb love Mary so?"
Love Mary so? Love Mary so?
"Why does the lamb love Mary so?"
The eager children cry
"Why, Mary loves the lamb, you know."
Loves the lamb, you know, loves the lamb, you know
"Why, Mary loves the lamb, you know."
The teacher did reply
{{collapse bottom}}
==Colour==
* [[Wikiversity web page colors|Color tables]] | [[Wikiversity:Color names|Color names]]
* e.g., Font: {{font|color=green|Green}}, Background: <span style="background:hotpink; color:white;">Pink</span>
==Columns==
===Column breaks===
{|
|-
| Works on all browsers (col-begin/break/end):
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}
* Col1
{{col-break}}
* Col2
{{col-break}}
* Col3
{{col-end}}
Works on all browsers (col/break/colend):
{{col}}
{{break}}
* Col1
{{break}}
* Col2
{{break}}
* Col3
{{col/end}}
|}
===Moz-column===
Easier to use, but doesn't work on all browsers:
<div style="column-count:3;-moz-column-count:3;-webkit-column-count:3">
* Ant
* Bee
* Buzzard
* Cat
* Dog
* Egret
* Elephant
* Tiger
* Whale
* Worm
</div>
==Conversions==
===HTML===
* [[w:Wikipedia:Tools/Editing_tools#From_HTML]]
* [http://www.ebruni.it/en/software/os/i_love_wiki/index.mpl i love wiki]
* {{tick}} [http://diberri.dyndns.org/wikipedia/html2wiki/index.html HTML::WikiConverter]
* {{tick}} [http://openfacts2.berlios.de/html2wiki/index.php HTML::WikiConverter]] Add URL
==CSS==
* [[MediaWiki:Common.css]]
==Custodianship==
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
** [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship]]
** [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]]
** [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]
** [[:Category:Wikiversity custodians]]
==Edit page==
Create an internal link to the edit source page using:
[[Special:EditPage/{{FULLPAGENAME}}|Edit source]]
<nowiki>
{{edit page}}
</nowiki>
gives:
{{edit page}}
<nowiki>
{{edit page box}}
</nowiki>
gives:
{{edit page box}}
==Extensions==
* [[Special:Version#Extensions]]
* [[/CategoryTree|CategoryTree]]
* [http://www.sandboxserver.org/wiki/index.php?title=Testing_Mediawiki_extensions Sandbox server - testing extensions]
* [[User:Jtneill/WYSIWIG|WYSIWIG]]
==Font==
<p>{{font|face="courier"|size=medium|courier size 3}}</p>
<p>{{font|face="verdana"|size=large|verdana size 4}}</p>
<p>{{font|face="arial"|size=x-large|arial size 5}}</p>
<p>{{font|face="times new roman"|size=xx-large|times new roman size 6}}</p>
<p><b>{{font|face="verdana"|size=xx-large|verdana bold size 6}}</b></p>
<p>{{font|face="lucida calligraphy"|size=xx-large|lucida calligraphy size 7}}</p>
==Formatting==
===Justification===
<div style="text-align: justify"> This text is right justified (but it doesn't look like unless the paragraph is long enough to go over one line on the page, so this is intentionally a particularly and unnecessarily long sentence in order to demonstrate right justification using <nowiki><div style="text-align: justify">...</div></nowiki>).</div>
==Line height==
{{center top}}<p style="line-height: 36px;">
<big><big><big><big>This uses a<br>line height of 36px</big></big></big></big></p>
<pre><p style="line-height: 36px;">...</p></pre>
{{center bottom}}
===Mouse-over===
* [[Help:Mouse-over]]
* [[Template:H:title]]
==Getting started==
* [[Wikiversity:Guided tour|Guided tour]]
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction|Introduction]] (Wikiversity)
* [[/Introduction|Introduction]] (Jtneill)
* [[/Welcome|Welcome]] (Jtneill)
* [[Introduction to Wiki]] - [[Wiki 101]]
* [[How to use wiki technology as a free learner]]
* [[:Image:Short.ogg|Wikiversity - short intro]] (10 sec. video)
* [[:Image:Editing_tutorial-large.ogg|Wikiversity editing tutorial]] (2 min video)
* [[Wikiversity:Community Portal]]
* [[Wikiversity:Content development]]
* [[Help:Edit summary]]
* [[Making links]]
==Good design==
* [[User:Jtneill/Good design]]
==Icons==
* [[Help:Icons]]
* [[User:McCormack/icons]]
==Images==
===[[Template:Gallery|Gallery]]===
{{Gallery
|title=Gallery of images
|footer=Uses this [[Template:Gallery|template]]
|width=150
|lines=2
||Comment
|File:Wikiversity-logo-Snorky.svg|[[Help:Contents/Links|Links]] can be put in captions.
|File:Wikiversity-logo-Snorky.svg|Full [[MediaWiki]]<br />[[syntax]] may be used…
|File:Wikiversity-logo-Snorky.svg|
}}
<!-- Fixed image in bottom right which is linked -->
<div id="template-navbar" style="position: fixed; left:1; right:0; bottom:0; padding:0; font-size:122%;">[[Image:Happy.png|right|50px|link=en:Happiness|Happiness]]</div>
===ImageMap===
* [[mw:Extension:ImageMap|Extension ImageMap]] e.g.,
{{center top}}
<imagemap>File:Treasurchest.svg|center|80px
default [[Special:Random/|Random Wikiversity mainspace page]]
desc none</imagemap>Click the treasure box to go to a random [[Wikiversity]] page{{center bottom}}
;Explanation
The ImageMap extension allows, among other things, an image to link directly to a page e.g., as an internal link:
<imagemap>
File:Treasurchest.svg|center|150px|alt=Alt text
default [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2015|Motivation and emotion Book - 2015]]
</imagemap>
The syntax is:
<pre style="overflow:auto">
<imagemap>
File:Treasurchest.svg|center|150px|alt=Alt text
default [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2015|Motivation and emotion Book - 2015]]
</imagemap>
</pre>
or as an external link:
<imagemap>
File:Treasurchest.svg|center|150px|alt=Alt text
default [https://www.psychologytoday.com/basics/motivation Motivation (Psychology Today)]
</imagemap>
The syntax is:
<pre style="overflow:auto">
<imagemap>
File:Treasurchest.svg|center|150px|alt=Alt text
default [https://www.psychologytoday.com/basics/motivation Motivation (Psychology Today)]
</imagemap>
</pre>
==Integrations==
I'm interested to explore possible connections between WV and:
* [http://archive.org Archive.org]
* [[w:Citizendium|Citizendium]]
* [[w:Google Groups]]
* [[Moodle]]
* [[Open University]]
* [http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?name=Cohere Cohere]
* [[WikiMedia Sister Projects]], particularly:
** [[Wikibooks]]
** [[Wikipedia]]
** [[Simple Wikipedia]]
==Licensing==
* My teaching materials are licensed under [[Wikiversity:License tags#Free licenses|creative commons attribution 2.5]] and hosted either on http://wilderdom.com or http://ucspace.canberra.edu.au. I am thinking I should be dual licensing, but am still coming to grips with trying to understand the licensing similarities, differences, and issues.
* I plan to gradually transfer most of my teaching materials to the various [[w:WikiMedia Foundation|WikiMedia Foundation]] wiki projects, particularly wikiversity. [[m:Polls|Let's just hope Jimbo doesn't put adds on these sites]], otherwise I will be transferring the materials somewhere else (again).
* [http://beta.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:IRC_meeting:New_licence_for_Wikiversity_Beta New_licence_for_Wikiversity_Beta]
* {{tl|db-copyvio}}
* {{tl|hangon}}
* [[:Category:Astronomy Images]]
==Links==
* Plain links: e.g., <span class="plainlinks">[http://archive.org http://archive.org]</span>: <br><nowiki><span class="plainlinks"> ... </span></nowiki>
* [[mw:Manual:Opening external links in a new window]]
==Long page warning==
* [[MediaWiki:Longpagewarning]]
==[[Main page]]==
* [[:Category:Main page templates]]
* [[Main Page/Layout 0.5]]
* <span class="plainlinks">[http://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Main_Page&oldid=209253 Main page]</span> (old)
==Map==
<mapframe latitude="-28.420391" longitude="136.757813" zoom="2" width="200" height="109" align="right">{
"type": "FeatureCollection",
"features": [
{
"type": "Feature",
"properties": {},
"geometry": {
"type": "Point",
"coordinates": [
149.12419,
-35.308275
]
}
}
]
}</mapframe>
==Namespaces==
* [[Special:NamespaceInfo]]
==Navigation==
{{nav|User:Jtneill}}
* [[Template:nav]]
==Notes==
Small e.g.,
{{attention}} <small>For calendar due dates, see unit outline.</small>
Notice templates
{{Notice|{{tl|Notice}}}}
{{Note|{{tl|Note}}}}
==Notifications==
* [[Help:Notifications]]
==[[Project:Participants|Participants]]==
===Custodians===
{{user|Adambro}}<br>
{{user|CQ}}<br>
{{user|Cormaggio}}<br>
{{user|Draicone}}<br>
{{user|Erkan Yilmaz}}<br>
{{user|Gbaor}}<br>
{{user|Leighblackall}}<br>
{{user|McCormack}}<br>
{{user|Mike.lifeguard}}<br>
{{user|Mu301}}<br>
{{user|SB_Johnny}}
===Users===
*{{Participant|CQ}} - see Person of the Hour script
*{{Participant|Donek}}
*{{Participant|Dan Polansky}}
==Pedagogy==
* [[Learning by doing]]
* [[Wikiversity:Project incubator]]
==Policy==
* [[w:Wikipedia:Contributing_FAQ#Is_there_a_minimum_age_requirement_to_contribute_or_register.3F|Is there a minimum age requirement?]]
{{Official policies}}
{{Proposed policies}}
==Project boxes==
* [[Help:Resource attribution]]
==Purge==
To purge the cache for a given page, append this to the URL:
?action=purge
[[mw:Manual:Purge]]
==Quotes==
* [[Template:Quote]]
*
==[[Quizzes]]==
* [[Help:Quiz-Simple]]
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** [http://eduforge.org/forum/forum.php?forum_id=1138 Qedoc now exports quizzes to Wikiversity]
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* [[meta:WMDE Technical Wishes/Sub-referencing]]
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* [[../Sandbox]]
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* Use a + instead of a space
==Search multiple categories==
;Dual category search including one category with subcategories
Search for chapters which [[Template:Clarification templates|need clarification]]:
<inputbox>
type=search
width=33
default=incategory:"Resources needing clarification"
namespaces=Main**
prefix=Motivation and emotion/Book
searchbuttonlabel=Search book chapters
bgcolor=transparent
break=no
</inputbox>
==Sitenotice==
* [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice]]
* [[MediaWiki:Sitenotice id]]
==Size==
===Big/small===
* Use <code><nowiki><big>...</big> - could be also <big><big>...</big></big> etc. and also <small>...</small></nowiki></code>
===CSS===
<div style="font-size: 200%">200% text</div><code><nowiki><div style="font-size: 200%">200% text</div></nowiki></code>
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* Transclude:
** <code><nowiki>{{Special:Prefixindex/User:Jtneill}}</nowiki></code>
** <code><nowiki>{{Special:Prefixindex/{{NAMESPACE}}:{{PAGENAME}}}}</nowiki></code>
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🟨🟡⭐💛🟥⭕️❌🟦🔵🟩🟢✅
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* <nowiki>@[[User:UserName|UserName]]</nowiki>
* <nowiki>{{ping|UserName}}</nowiki>
==Templates==
===Page development===
* {{tl|welcome and expand}} - {{tl|we}}
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* {{tl|search}}
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* <nowiki>{{notice|{{findsources}}}}</nowiki>
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==Thoughts==
* [[Red link]]s are doorways to the infinite library ([[w:The Library of Babel|Library of Babel]])
==Tooltips==
{{Tooltip|Tooltips allow additional text to be displayed when cursor hovers over|Pretty cool, eh?}}
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* [[w:Special:GlobalRenameRequest]]
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* http://usability.wikimedia.org - [http://usability.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Jtneill Jtneill]
==Video==
* .ogg files can be uploaded and embedded
* See [[/Video]] for examples
==wikEd==
* [[w:User_talk:Cacycle/wikEd]]
==Wiki2Reveal==
* [[Wiki2Reveal]] (slides on the fly from MediaWiki page)
==x Test anchor==
<!-- Test anchor - don't delete! -->
{{anchor|test}}
==See also==
* [[User:Jade Knight/Tools]]
7zxq2gc47ofoeowhomls5wr4w8p7byv
Computer Skills/Fundamentals/Typing
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Removed bloat, streamlined page.
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{{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}/Sidebar}}
'''Typing''' is the process of entering or inputting text by pressing keys on a typewriter, computer keyboard, mobile phone, or calculator.<ref>[[Wikipedia: Typing]]</ref>
Learners should practice typing for fifteen minutes each day until their typing speed is at least 30 words per minute.
== Multimedia ==
* [https://www.typing.com/student/lessons Typing.com: Learn to Type]
* [https://monkeytype.com/ Monkeytype]
== Activities ==
* Complete the [https://www.typing.com/student/lessons Typing.com lessons.]
* Use [https://monkeytype.com/ Monkeytype.com] , and practice typing daily until you can reach 30 words per minute consistently.
== See Also ==
* [[Elementary Typing]]
* [[Introduction_to_Computers/Input_Devices |Input Devices]]
* [[Wikipedia: Typing]]
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{subpage navbar}}
{{CourseCat}}
[[Category:Computer Skills]]
[[Category:Typing]]
[[Category:Completed resources]]
rmlo6eamspueufw9d1hcmsogmo5uq5p
Talk:Main Page/News
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2808958
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BigKrow
3069766
/* write news? */ new section
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text/x-wiki
=== Semi ===
Should this page be full protected? Obviously all the custodians should have it watchlisted, but no one other than a custodian has ever edited it. [[User:Salmon of Doubt|Salmon of Doubt]] 11:44, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
* The idea of the complex protection system on the various main page templates was to leave this particular page semi-protected only so that ordinary users can add news items. This page should only be fully protected if it becomes a repeated target for vandalism, which is not yet the case. --[[User:McCormack|McCormack]] 12:07, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
== Possible use of dynamicpagelist ==
{{#invoke:DynamicPageList
|show
|category=Completed resources
|namespace=
|count=10
|mode=unordered
|ordermethod=categoryaddlastedit
|orderdate=categoryaddlastdate
|order=descending
}} --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 21:19, 16 October 2016 (UTC)
So, if I follow current custom, [[Main Page/News]] would appear something like:
'''2016'''
* '''15 October:''' The new courses [[IT Fundamentals]] and [[Assessing Human Rights]] are completed and ready for students and professionals
* '''15 October:''' The new book chapter [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2016/Emotional hijacking|Emotional hijacking]] is ready for use by psychologists and their students
* '''12 October:''' The Python Programming lessons [[Python Programming/Modules|Modules]] and [[Python Programming/Classes|Classes]] are completed and ready for students
* '''15 August:''' '''Wikiversity celebrates its 10-year anniversary!'''
* '''15 August:''' The fall semester begins for the course [[principles of radiation astronomy]].
* '''8 August:''' The [[ENG 099|open course in conversational American English]] for EFL/ESL/ELL/ESOL students starts.
* '''31 July:''' For [[Wikiversity:Year of Science 2016|'''The Wikimedia Year of Science''']], try using the May 9, 2016 [[w:Transit of Mercury]] to improve the [[Stars/Sun/Locating the Sun|location of the Sun]]. --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 21:22, 16 October 2016 (UTC)
::I'm confused. You wrote that "It would be great to have five to six things to put in the news each week instead of five to six for three to four months!" Are you also wanting to maintain this manually rather than using DynamicPageList to do the updates automatically? If you are working manually, there is no reason to list IT Fundamentals again, as it is only on the DynamicPageList due to vandalism. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 23:40, 16 October 2016 (UTC)
:::Originally I was intending to try to maintain this subpage manually. Your use of dynamicpagelist suggests that at least this part could be automated. But there appears to be no easy way to include what the resources are, their approximate dates of completion and intended targets. I also wanted to include those News items that are not in that specific category. Combining the two in an automated way would really be great! --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 02:11, 17 October 2016 (UTC)
==Earlier unannounced completed resources==
These would currently have been updated or improved:
{{div col|colwidth=12em}}
{{#invoke:DynamicPageList
|show
|category=Completed resources
|namespace=
|count=10
|mode=unordered
|ordermethod=categoryaddlastedit
|orderdate=categoryaddlastdate
|order=descending
}}
{{Div col end}} --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 21:54, 25 June 2017 (UTC)
# [[Mathematical Properties]] was announced on 20 January 2018,
# [[Internet Protocol Analysis]] was announced on 15 March 2019,
# [[Overcoming Hate]] was announced on 9 July 2019,
# [[Unleashing Creativity]] was announced on 2 July 2019,
# [[Candor]] was announced on 28 June 2019,
# [[Exploring Social Constructs]] was announced on 31 May 2019,
# [[Applied Programming]] was announced on 17 May 2018,
# [[Finding Courage]] was announced on 17 April 2019,
# [[Moral Reasoning]] was announced on 14 April 2019,
# [[Coping with Ego]] was announced on 17 March 2019,
# [[Resolving Anger]] was announced on 1 February 2019,
# [[Communicating Power]] was announced on 29 January 2019,
# [[What you can change and what you cannot]] was announced on 28 January 2019,
# [[Recognizing Emotions]] was announced on 25 January 2019,
# [[Appraising Emotional Responses]] was announced on 24 January 2019, and
# [[Open Source 3-D Printing]] was announced on 20 January 2019. --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 01:35, 15 September 2019 (UTC)
== COVID-19 COBOL programmer shortage? ==
<blockquote>COVID-19 COBOL programmer shortage</blockquote>
Where can I find information about this topic (from 12 April news item)? Thanks in advance. [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ottawahitech|contribs]]) 19:13, 21 April 2020 (UTC)
:{{Ping|Ottawahitech}} There's quite a bit you can learn with a search engine. Just from my cursory following of the news, I know that the problem is particularly acute in New Jersey in the banking industry. If you're interested in learning, you may want to track down *How to Learn COBOL in 21 Days*, which is free online. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:28, 21 April 2020 (UTC)
:{{At|Ottawahitech}} A long list of additional resources are included at [[Talk:COBOL]]. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 23:29, 21 April 2020 (UTC)
::{{At|Koavf|Dave Braunschweig}} actually there is a story behind my question. Back in 2011 I was trying to insert information into a Bank of America article and was meeting a [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=436375222&title=Talk%3ABank_of_America#The_suicide_of_Kevin_Flanagan lot of resistance], even though at the time the information was documented on another Wikipedia article where I first learned about it. The information was about a computer programmer who committed suicide in front of one of Bank of America's properties. According to the the article, he was despondent after losing his job at Bofa, which went to H1B workers. Flanagn and his layed off coleauges all of whom lost their jobs were tasked with training their replacements.
::To make a long story short, there were two persistent editors guarding information on the Bofa article, and I eventually moved on to other areas. Those two kept the story out of wikipedia, and months or even years later I found out that the article about Flanagan himself disappreaed as well. Since then I am skeptical about claims of a shortage of skilled people made by employers without the corresponding verifiable reliable sources showing a shortage actually exists. Maybe that's just me? [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ottawahitech|contribs]]) 02:24, 22 April 2020 (UTC)
:::{{ping|Ottawahitech}} Well, that certainly escalated quickly. Without getting into the specifics of any editing disputes from the past or possible criminal disappearances, etc. it seems like your main question is, "Are there ''really'' a shortage of COBOL specialists?" and the answer is 100% yes. This has been a known problem for well over a decade (likely longer) and if you want evidence of that, I would recommend looking at job listings to see how much a company will pay someone with COBOL knowledge versus (e.g.) Python or C+. Having proficiency and especially experience in COBOL is a good way to make money in programming. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:37, 22 April 2020 (UTC)
:::{{At|Ottawahitech}} I'm sorry, but for me this approach crosses the line. I have recommended that you move on from past incidents on other Wikimedia projects.[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3AOttawahitech&type=revision&diff=2141168&oldid=2137899] I have strongly encouraged you to move on from past incidents on other Wikimedia projects. I am now warning you to move on from past incidents on other Wikimedia projects. Wikiversity's [[Wikiversity:Mission|mission]] is to create and host a range of learning projects and learning resources. You need to find a way to contribute to this mission that doesn't involve past edits elsewhere. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 03:01, 22 April 2020 (UTC)
== Finding Common Ground ==
The course [[Finding Common Ground]] is now complete. May I add it to the news myself or is there some other way to have it added? Thanks. --[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 01:40, 14 March 2022 (UTC)
:I've added an announcement of your course's completion to Main Page News, please modify if you wish. --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 05:16, 14 March 2022 (UTC)
::Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:50, 14 March 2022 (UTC)
== bug ==
January 5, 2023 is after December 25, 2023??? [[Special:Contributions/79.185.141.205|79.185.141.205]] ([[User talk:79.185.141.205|discuss]])
:fixed, thanks for bringing this up. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:30, 6 January 2024 (UTC)
=== another bug ===
March 6, 2024 is after December 5, 2024??? [[Special:Contributions/109.243.1.105|109.243.1.105]] ([[User talk:109.243.1.105|discuss]])
:Fixed. I'll try to be more attentive to this page. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:10, 18 July 2025 (UTC)
==noinclude==
{{ping|Dave Braunschweig}} I suppose, the offending <code><nowiki></noinclude></nowiki></code> on the Main Page comes from here. --[[User:Watchduck|Watchduck]] <small>([[User talk:Watchduck|quack]])</small> 21:22, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
:Thanks for the watchful eye {{ping|Watchduck}} I've fixed it up. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 21:45, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
== write news? ==
here? @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:10, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
g7erbrk8sz0hau1eiwh2i54p2enybtk
2809090
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Koavf
147
/* write news? */ Reply
2809090
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== Semi ===
Should this page be full protected? Obviously all the custodians should have it watchlisted, but no one other than a custodian has ever edited it. [[User:Salmon of Doubt|Salmon of Doubt]] 11:44, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
* The idea of the complex protection system on the various main page templates was to leave this particular page semi-protected only so that ordinary users can add news items. This page should only be fully protected if it becomes a repeated target for vandalism, which is not yet the case. --[[User:McCormack|McCormack]] 12:07, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
== Possible use of dynamicpagelist ==
{{#invoke:DynamicPageList
|show
|category=Completed resources
|namespace=
|count=10
|mode=unordered
|ordermethod=categoryaddlastedit
|orderdate=categoryaddlastdate
|order=descending
}} --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 21:19, 16 October 2016 (UTC)
So, if I follow current custom, [[Main Page/News]] would appear something like:
'''2016'''
* '''15 October:''' The new courses [[IT Fundamentals]] and [[Assessing Human Rights]] are completed and ready for students and professionals
* '''15 October:''' The new book chapter [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2016/Emotional hijacking|Emotional hijacking]] is ready for use by psychologists and their students
* '''12 October:''' The Python Programming lessons [[Python Programming/Modules|Modules]] and [[Python Programming/Classes|Classes]] are completed and ready for students
* '''15 August:''' '''Wikiversity celebrates its 10-year anniversary!'''
* '''15 August:''' The fall semester begins for the course [[principles of radiation astronomy]].
* '''8 August:''' The [[ENG 099|open course in conversational American English]] for EFL/ESL/ELL/ESOL students starts.
* '''31 July:''' For [[Wikiversity:Year of Science 2016|'''The Wikimedia Year of Science''']], try using the May 9, 2016 [[w:Transit of Mercury]] to improve the [[Stars/Sun/Locating the Sun|location of the Sun]]. --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 21:22, 16 October 2016 (UTC)
::I'm confused. You wrote that "It would be great to have five to six things to put in the news each week instead of five to six for three to four months!" Are you also wanting to maintain this manually rather than using DynamicPageList to do the updates automatically? If you are working manually, there is no reason to list IT Fundamentals again, as it is only on the DynamicPageList due to vandalism. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 23:40, 16 October 2016 (UTC)
:::Originally I was intending to try to maintain this subpage manually. Your use of dynamicpagelist suggests that at least this part could be automated. But there appears to be no easy way to include what the resources are, their approximate dates of completion and intended targets. I also wanted to include those News items that are not in that specific category. Combining the two in an automated way would really be great! --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 02:11, 17 October 2016 (UTC)
==Earlier unannounced completed resources==
These would currently have been updated or improved:
{{div col|colwidth=12em}}
{{#invoke:DynamicPageList
|show
|category=Completed resources
|namespace=
|count=10
|mode=unordered
|ordermethod=categoryaddlastedit
|orderdate=categoryaddlastdate
|order=descending
}}
{{Div col end}} --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 21:54, 25 June 2017 (UTC)
# [[Mathematical Properties]] was announced on 20 January 2018,
# [[Internet Protocol Analysis]] was announced on 15 March 2019,
# [[Overcoming Hate]] was announced on 9 July 2019,
# [[Unleashing Creativity]] was announced on 2 July 2019,
# [[Candor]] was announced on 28 June 2019,
# [[Exploring Social Constructs]] was announced on 31 May 2019,
# [[Applied Programming]] was announced on 17 May 2018,
# [[Finding Courage]] was announced on 17 April 2019,
# [[Moral Reasoning]] was announced on 14 April 2019,
# [[Coping with Ego]] was announced on 17 March 2019,
# [[Resolving Anger]] was announced on 1 February 2019,
# [[Communicating Power]] was announced on 29 January 2019,
# [[What you can change and what you cannot]] was announced on 28 January 2019,
# [[Recognizing Emotions]] was announced on 25 January 2019,
# [[Appraising Emotional Responses]] was announced on 24 January 2019, and
# [[Open Source 3-D Printing]] was announced on 20 January 2019. --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 01:35, 15 September 2019 (UTC)
== COVID-19 COBOL programmer shortage? ==
<blockquote>COVID-19 COBOL programmer shortage</blockquote>
Where can I find information about this topic (from 12 April news item)? Thanks in advance. [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ottawahitech|contribs]]) 19:13, 21 April 2020 (UTC)
:{{Ping|Ottawahitech}} There's quite a bit you can learn with a search engine. Just from my cursory following of the news, I know that the problem is particularly acute in New Jersey in the banking industry. If you're interested in learning, you may want to track down *How to Learn COBOL in 21 Days*, which is free online. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:28, 21 April 2020 (UTC)
:{{At|Ottawahitech}} A long list of additional resources are included at [[Talk:COBOL]]. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 23:29, 21 April 2020 (UTC)
::{{At|Koavf|Dave Braunschweig}} actually there is a story behind my question. Back in 2011 I was trying to insert information into a Bank of America article and was meeting a [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=436375222&title=Talk%3ABank_of_America#The_suicide_of_Kevin_Flanagan lot of resistance], even though at the time the information was documented on another Wikipedia article where I first learned about it. The information was about a computer programmer who committed suicide in front of one of Bank of America's properties. According to the the article, he was despondent after losing his job at Bofa, which went to H1B workers. Flanagn and his layed off coleauges all of whom lost their jobs were tasked with training their replacements.
::To make a long story short, there were two persistent editors guarding information on the Bofa article, and I eventually moved on to other areas. Those two kept the story out of wikipedia, and months or even years later I found out that the article about Flanagan himself disappreaed as well. Since then I am skeptical about claims of a shortage of skilled people made by employers without the corresponding verifiable reliable sources showing a shortage actually exists. Maybe that's just me? [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ottawahitech|contribs]]) 02:24, 22 April 2020 (UTC)
:::{{ping|Ottawahitech}} Well, that certainly escalated quickly. Without getting into the specifics of any editing disputes from the past or possible criminal disappearances, etc. it seems like your main question is, "Are there ''really'' a shortage of COBOL specialists?" and the answer is 100% yes. This has been a known problem for well over a decade (likely longer) and if you want evidence of that, I would recommend looking at job listings to see how much a company will pay someone with COBOL knowledge versus (e.g.) Python or C+. Having proficiency and especially experience in COBOL is a good way to make money in programming. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:37, 22 April 2020 (UTC)
:::{{At|Ottawahitech}} I'm sorry, but for me this approach crosses the line. I have recommended that you move on from past incidents on other Wikimedia projects.[https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3AOttawahitech&type=revision&diff=2141168&oldid=2137899] I have strongly encouraged you to move on from past incidents on other Wikimedia projects. I am now warning you to move on from past incidents on other Wikimedia projects. Wikiversity's [[Wikiversity:Mission|mission]] is to create and host a range of learning projects and learning resources. You need to find a way to contribute to this mission that doesn't involve past edits elsewhere. -- [[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] ([[User talk:Dave Braunschweig|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dave Braunschweig|contribs]]) 03:01, 22 April 2020 (UTC)
== Finding Common Ground ==
The course [[Finding Common Ground]] is now complete. May I add it to the news myself or is there some other way to have it added? Thanks. --[[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 01:40, 14 March 2022 (UTC)
:I've added an announcement of your course's completion to Main Page News, please modify if you wish. --[[User:Marshallsumter|Marshallsumter]] ([[User talk:Marshallsumter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Marshallsumter|contribs]]) 05:16, 14 March 2022 (UTC)
::Thanks! [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 11:50, 14 March 2022 (UTC)
== bug ==
January 5, 2023 is after December 25, 2023??? [[Special:Contributions/79.185.141.205|79.185.141.205]] ([[User talk:79.185.141.205|discuss]])
:fixed, thanks for bringing this up. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:30, 6 January 2024 (UTC)
=== another bug ===
March 6, 2024 is after December 5, 2024??? [[Special:Contributions/109.243.1.105|109.243.1.105]] ([[User talk:109.243.1.105|discuss]])
:Fixed. I'll try to be more attentive to this page. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:10, 18 July 2025 (UTC)
==noinclude==
{{ping|Dave Braunschweig}} I suppose, the offending <code><nowiki></noinclude></nowiki></code> on the Main Page comes from here. --[[User:Watchduck|Watchduck]] <small>([[User talk:Watchduck|quack]])</small> 21:22, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
:Thanks for the watchful eye {{ping|Watchduck}} I've fixed it up. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 21:45, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
== write news? ==
here? @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:10, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:If you are serious about writing news here, I recommend getting together other Wikinews editors (including me: I'm happy to help) to organize at [[School:Journalism]], plan out what we want to do, present any radical proposals (like wholesale rehosting Wikinews here) to the community, and then starting the process of regularly writing news stories if the community agrees to include hosting citizen journalism here as an ongoing activity. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:21, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
b21s689fhahqu7thagvorvcfhgi6c1n
Wikiversity:Request custodian action
4
75745
2808992
2808573
2026-05-13T23:58:42Z
NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh
2922842
/* Request for Page Creation Approval - Research on Dr. Ian Stevenson */ Reply
2808992
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{/Header}}
== Dan Polansky ==
I would like to ask you to assess the behavior of Dan Polansky, who in my opinion continues to violate [[Wikiversity:Etiquette|Etiquette]], calls users who disagree with him trolls, [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Harold_Foppele&oldid=2760143#Your_qualification questions their expertise], tests them, etc. This is most evident in [[Wikiversity:Community Review/Dan Polansky]], where he has already indicated that two discussion opponents are trolls. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:05, 18 November 2025 (UTC)
: The coddling of overt disruptor Harold Foppele (substantiation is in RCA above) and proven provocateur and disruptor Juandev (substantiation in CR above) must stop. The English Wikiversity must start to properly curate its content and discipline disruptive editors. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:10, 18 November 2025 (UTC)
:[[Wikiversity:Community Review/Dan Polansky]] is underway; outcome pending. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:03, 27 November 2025 (UTC)
::It has been closed with consensus to ban him indefinitely from this project, I believe there is nothing else to do here. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:06, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
== Sidewide count.js ==
i would like something like: [[Template:User contrib count/count.js]]. i created [[Template:User contrib count]] and a user/common.js. {{User contrib count}}.<br><br> so a "count.js" would complete it. See [[User:Harold Foppele/common.js]].
If an Administrator could help please. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 19:22, 18 January 2026 (UTC)
== need to add my profile ==
im trying to add new profile content [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 18:03, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
:You can edit it now. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:05, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
::where can create a new one [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 18:51, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
:::i have created and its in sandbox. i would like to know when it will be approved [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 19:38, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Please don’t create [[wv:spam|spam]] pages as it will be deleted. Please also read [[WV:Scope]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 04:01, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
== Im trying to add new profile while add content its shows not alowed ==
This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed. If you believe your action was constructive, please [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|inform an administrator]] of what you were trying to do. A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: New User Exceeded New Page Limit
This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed. If you believe your action was constructive, please [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|inform an administrator]] of what you were trying to do. A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: New User Created Page with External Link [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 18:51, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
== New User: cannot create talk page ==
Hi, I am a new user of Wikiversity and I wanted to create a talk page for the article [[ChatGPT's Essay on Kohlberg's Theory: AI's Use in Academic Writing]]. As a new user, I was barred from performing this action. The text that I wanted to add to the talk page is:
<blockquote>
I have doubts as to to the reliability of this essay. Take for rexample the sentence:
<blockquote>
Due to its efficiency, AI has saved 380,000-403,000 lives per year in European healthcare as reported in a recent Deloitte and MedTech Europe report<ref>Dantas, C., Mackiewicz, K., Tageo, V., Jacucci, G., Guardado, D., Ortet, S., Varlamis, I., Maniadakis, M., De Lera, E., Quintas, J., Kocsis, O., & Vassiliou, C. (2021). Benefits and hurdles of AI in the workplace – what comes next? ''International Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems, 10'', 9-17. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351993615_Benefits_and_Hurdles_of_AI_In_The_Workplace_-What_Comes_Next</ref>.
</blockquote>
Reading the reference (freely available on ResearchGate), one notes:
# that the reference is from 2021 (predating the widespread use of LLMs such as ChatGPT and the associated 'AI' boom), and
# that the reference factually contradicts this essay.
Quoting from the reference:
<blockquote>
There are enormous benefits of applying AI-based solutions to monitor workers’ health and prevent accidents or, currently, COVID-19 infections, and those benefits are reported with enormous potential. According to the recent Deloitte and MedTech Europe report [11], implementing AI in European healthcare systems could save up 380,000 to 403,000 lives annually or €170.9 to 212.4 billion per year.
</blockquote>
Not that the reference says ''could save'', not ''saves'' as in the essay.
This calls into question the reliability of the essay.
</blockquote>
Could an administrator make this addition for me? Thank you!
{{reflist}}
[[User:Æolus|Æolus]] ([[User talk:Æolus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Æolus|contribs]]) 06:53, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Æolus|Æolus]] I have added it for you, you can change the header and sign it now. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 08:05, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you! [[User:Æolus|Æolus]] ([[User talk:Æolus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Æolus|contribs]]) 12:43, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
== Disallowed to add a page on a course ==
I'm trying to populate a newly created course on Wikiversity, but it blocks me from creating more pages with "New User Exceeded New Page Limit". Could this be lifted please? [[User:Berkeleywho|Berkeleywho]] ([[User talk:Berkeleywho|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Berkeleywho|contribs]]) 13:21, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Sorry! Never mind. I was trying to create a new article instead of a new page. All good now. [[User:Berkeleywho|Berkeleywho]] ([[User talk:Berkeleywho|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Berkeleywho|contribs]]) 14:03, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
== Harold Foppele adding LLM-generated nonsense and personal fiction ==
I became aware of [[User:Harold Foppele]]'s editing after I deleted some of his uploads on Commons. He appears to be adding a large amount of text and images that are some combination of personal fiction and LLM-generated nonsense. This includes:
*[[Quantum Ultra fast lasers#Future thought experiment|Personal speculative fiction]] in an otherwise "nonfiction" article
*Uploading nonsense LLM-created [[:File:Rontosecond pulse laser (Schematic).jpg|diagrams]] and [[:File:Rontosecond pulse laser (Futuristic).jpg|renders]] for nonexistent lab equipment, with fake source (on Commons, he indicated these files as having been created by him using an LLM)
*Uploading nonsense LLM-created images of equations with obvious artifacts. These images, such as [[:File:Redfield equation (non-Markovian).png]] and [[:File:Lindblad equation (Markovian).png]], don't even match the text he puts them with.
Much of his writing is also of extremely poor quality, to the point where it's not clear whether it's written by him or an LLM. I'm not an active editor on this project, so I'm not as familiar with the standards here, but I believe this is worth custodian attention. [[User:Pi.1415926535|Pi.1415926535]] ([[User talk:Pi.1415926535|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Pi.1415926535|contribs]]) 03:06, 23 February 2026 (UTC)
:Fake source ''and'' contradictory copyright info, claiming both public domain and CC license. Moreover, if they are indeed nearly-direct LLM output, depending on jurisdiction they may not even be eligible for copyright.
:I've put speedy deletion marks for the equations, because they're obviously not coherent mathematical equations (the parentheses don't match, the symbols merge into each other the way text in image models often do, etc) [[User:Sesquilinear|Sesquilinear]] ([[User talk:Sesquilinear|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Sesquilinear|contribs]]) 21:50, 7 March 2026 (UTC)
== Repeated removal of RFD notices by Harold Foppele ==
{{User|Harold Foppele }}
This editor is appearing in multiple noticeboards for behaviour which is contentious. Ther latest adventure is the repeated removal of tye RFD notice at [[Quantum/Henry C. Kapteyn]]. You will see from their contributions record the number of times. I have warned Tham on their user tag page that this is tantaomunt to volunteering to be blocked here. They have a track record of achieving blocks on enWiki and Commons already.
They have all the appearance of shooting not to understand when given direct information about their behaviour, whichever project they are editing, and are fast becoming a time sink. Their behaviour across multiple WMF sites may well lead to a Global Lock, but I do not believe they have quite reached the threshold for that.
I believe that what is required is a preventative block to seek to ensure thatchy understand the seriousness of their behaviour, and the need to be collegial. 🇵🇸‍🇺🇦 [[User:Timtrent|Timtrent]] 🇺🇦 [[User talk:Timtrent|talk to me]] 🇺🇦‍🇵🇸 23:03, 4 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{Done}} [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 11:45, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
== Blocks for sockpuppet ==
Please block [[User:Harold Foppele]] and [[User:Johnwilliamsiii]] for sockpuppetry based on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Sockpuppet_investigations/Harold_Foppele en wiki] CU and [https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?diff=1177465640 commons] CU investigations. The user has also violated copyright, see the above discussion. A block is necessary to prevent further abuse. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 11:30, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
:<small>@[[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]]</small> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 11:31, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
:: {{Done}} [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 11:44, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
:CC. @[[User:Timtrent|Timtrent]], @[[User:Sesquilinear|Sesquilinear]], @[[User:Pi.1415926535|Pi.1415926535]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 11:33, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for the ping. I concur based on [[w:en:WP:DUCK|behaviour]]. CUs appear divided. 🇵🇸‍🇺🇦 [[User:Timtrent|Timtrent]] 🇺🇦 [[User talk:Timtrent|talk to me]] 🇺🇦‍🇵🇸 11:41, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
== Problem when trying to start a discussion with authors of the Plurilingual education portal ==
The authors I wanted to discuss with are called "Project PEP" and my name is Franch Chandler. How can I be allowed to do so ? [[User:French Chandler|French Chandler]] ([[User talk:French Chandler|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/French Chandler|contribs]]) 18:25, 16 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:French Chandler|French Chandler]] place your qestion [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Projet_PEP&action=edit into the dialog box] on this link and hit Publish page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:22, 16 March 2026 (UTC)
== Please publish my post ==
My post is about "Every child grows and develops at their own pace, but some may experience challenges that affect their ability to perform everyday tasks. These challenges can include difficulties with fine motor skills, sensory processing, handwriting, feeding, and self-regulation. When these issues are not addressed early, they can impact a child’s confidence, academic performance, and independence.
With the rise of digital healthcare services, '''online physical therapy''' has emerged as a powerful and accessible solution for parents seeking support for their children. This modern approach provides structured, personalized therapy programs that can be accessed from the comfort of home, making it easier for families to ensure consistent care." [[User:Skyabovetherapy|Skyabovetherapy]] ([[User talk:Skyabovetherapy|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Skyabovetherapy|contribs]]) 12:28, 28 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Skyabovetherapy|Skyabovetherapy]] Well, you can publish it yourself, Wikiversity is a free environement, where everybody can create educational resources. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:11, 29 March 2026 (UTC)
::They actually triggered some abuse filters. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:24, 29 March 2026 (UTC)
:I looked at your attempts to add this text and I see a link to one website repeated many times, which reminds me of the misuse of Wikiversity for self-promotion or to increase the importance of the website. It is necessary to remind you here that Wikiversity is not a place for promotion, but a place for education. So if you want to educate, it will not be a problem to create the page without external links with a clearly defined procedure for how people should use it and what to expect from it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:07, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== New user limit ==
Hi, I am creating an AIPA Method learning resource page.
I am the author of the linked research, and I hit the “new user limit” and “new page with external link” filters while publishing.
Here is the link to the page in creation: [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=AIPA_Method&veaction=edit]
Thank you for your help.
Best regards,
Senad Dizdarević [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 07:19, 30 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] I should admit I dont know, what is "new user limit", but if filter blocks your page because of certain external link, you may force to save anyway and sometimes it works. It should not work, when the website is blacklisted. As of now, I am not seeing you to save page in main namespace, so try to save it without external links first. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:30, 30 March 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you, you are very kind.
::I will wait a day, and try again (without links, too).
::Today, I already created About Me info page, and maybe that is enough for the filters for one day. [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 07:53, 30 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Well, I have analyzed your contribution to Wikiversity and I should point out here, that this project is not a place for advertising, so there is no way of promoting your books and authority this way. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:56, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Hi, my About Me page is just an info page with the neutral as possible presentation of my work.
::::There is a big difference between informing and advertising. Informing is neutrally stating that something exists and requiring no action, while advertising is a special communication form with intent to cause certain action from readers. For example, click here, click there, order this, buy that.
::::There is no such intention, form, or terms on my info page. Just neutral information. I don't hide and I am not ashamed that I am write and author, and that is a part of the usual bio, including works. I checked your user page: "I graduated from the Czech University of Life Sciences in Prague and studied information science at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University." I think that if you had written a book on Life Science, you would have mentioned that as well.
::::Most of the Info page is about my research and AIPA Method which is a valid contribution to psychology, consciousness studies, identity theory, and personality development. Actually, my paper '''AIPA Method: A Cognitive-Phenomenological Model for Identity Reconstruction and Stabilization in Pure Awareness''' is now in the peer review procedure at Journal of Consciousness Studies.
::::Here is a part from the Wikiversity AIPA Method page in creation (waiting for the end of the time limit for new users): [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 06:47, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::For the unknown reasons, the form didn't publish my second part of the message:
:::::I believe this is a valid contribution to Wikiversity.
:::::Best Regards,
:::::Senad [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 06:52, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
::::::And the third try:
:::::: == Introduction ==
::::::The AIPA Method addresses a gap in contemporary personal development and consciousness science: most evidence‑based approaches (CBT, MBSR, MBCT, standard meditation) operate at the level of mental content—reframing thoughts, observing them, or reducing their impact—rather than at the level of identity structure. In contrast, AIPA targets the structural relationship between the self and the mind, aiming at durable identity reconstruction rooted in Pure Awareness rather than symptom management.
::::::The central research question of the primary AIPA preprint is whether a structured, sequentially staged method can produce permanent identity reconstruction rooted in Pure Awareness, and how such a method compares to established approaches in scope, mechanism, and outcome.
:::::: == Theoretical foundations ==
::::::The AIPA framework is grounded in the cognitive‑phenomenological tradition (e.g., McAdams, Varela, Metzinger, Erikson), contemporary consciousness science on minimal phenomenal experience, and qualitative methods advocacy in psychology. It builds directly on:
::::::* Empirical work on pure awareness and Minimal Phenomenal Experience (MPE), especially Gamma & Metzinger’s large‑scale study of content‑reduced awareness states.
::::::* Metzinger’s proposal of minimal phenomenal experience as an entry point for a minimal unifying model of consciousness.
::::::* Narrative identity and partial‑self models within personality and identity theory.
::::::Within this backdrop, AIPA proposes Pure Awareness as a distinct, operationally specified state that can become a structural ground of identity rather than a transient meditative experience.
:::::: == Experiential empiricism ==
::::::The empirical foundation of the AIPA Method is explicitly first‑person and experiential, combining:
::::::* A 22‑year longitudinal autoethnographic self‑study (2003–2025) documenting partial personality episodes, protocol use, and outcomes.
::::::* A 13‑year prospective verification period with zero self‑reported recurrence of targeted harmful behaviors after a dated stabilization point (1 January 2006).
::::::* A high‑ecological‑validity “stress test” during acute bereavement, used to examine whether non‑reactive awareness remains stable under maximal provocation.
::::::* Two independent practitioner cases (an Amazon‑verified report and a structured questionnaire case) providing preliminary convergent signals across cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and identity dimensions.
::::::All central constructs (Pure Awareness, partial personalities, the Switch, identity stabilization) are operationalized with explicit phenomenological and behavioral criteria intended to enable replication and future third‑person measurement.
::::::I believe this is a valid contribution to Wikiversity.
::::::Best regards,
::::::Senad [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 06:54, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
== Unable to publish pages ==
Whenever I try to publish a page with linked sources it gets flagged and says I'm a new user attempting to publish content with outside links. Those outside links are my sources. [[User:Soboyed|Soboyed]] ([[User talk:Soboyed|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Soboyed|contribs]]) 04:52, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:This restriction is automatically lifted after you have edited for a certain time (I don't recall that time off-hand, but it is not long). This is designed to stop spam. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:53, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
== Showing error to publish a Post ==
My action was constructive, not destructive, please allow to publish it. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-20906-18|~2026-20906-18]] ([[User talk:~2026-20906-18|talk]]) 08:06, 4 April 2026 (UTC)
:Maybe you got caught in a filter. Consider [[Special:CreateAccount|creating an account]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:06, 4 April 2026 (UTC)
:Your edits, [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Special:AbuseLog&wpSearchUser=%7E2026-20906-18 these ones], seems to have tripped a filter when you tried to create a page on [[Create]] which external links. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:58, 4 April 2026 (UTC)
:Have you read my [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action&diff=prev&oldid=2802219 previous reply] to you @[[User:~2026-20906-18|~2026-20906-18]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:02, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
== Abuse filters which should be deleted ==
Hi, there are some abuse filters which should probably be deleted.
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/1]] (not needed anymore)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/2]] (no hits since 2018)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/3]] (not needed since there are global filters that disallow this specific type of spam filter 3 would have catched)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/4]] (looking at the logs, there are too many false positives)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/5]] (no hits since 2023)
* Abuse filters 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 (these filters are not needed anymore)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/17]] (no hits since 2022)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/19]] (no hits since 2019)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/21]] (false positives, vandal currently inactive)
Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:51, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:Why do these need to be deleted rather than inactivated? Do inactive abuse filters cause a server strain? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:39, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:: Deleted filters do not cause strain to the servers. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:28, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:These sounds like sensible suggestions but, yes, would inactivation perhaps make more sense than deletion for at least some filters? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:35, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:I would keep them @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Alternatively, I would turn off the ones that haven't caught anything for a long time, but I would leave them enabled in case they need to be turned on or improved. If someone has already written the code and we don't have hundreds of free man-hours of programmers on Wikiversity, the server load seems secondary to me, and is negligible compared to other things. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:11, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I know how to write abuse filter code and regex, but I would recommend disabling filters that have never caught anything in a long time ''and'' those who made lots of false positives. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:09, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Of course @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]], there are people here today who are capable of changing the code. But the question is what it will be like in a few years, the question is what will happen if those two are busy for a long time, etc. That's why I would leave it so that those who don't know much about code can be inspired by it and will need to do something with it someday - plus, more code for different types of filtering is actually great educational material on how those filters work. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 11:41, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
Here's the updated list of abuse filters under review with actions I've taken (several disabled, one basic code improvement, and some actions changed) - none have been deleted so they can all be edited and reactivayed - please suggest any further changes:
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/1]] (not needed anymore) - One time account spam bot - 4 hits over 10 years ago - Disabled in 2024 - May be useful in future
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/2]] (no hits since 2018) - Userspace spamming - 778 hits; none since 2018 likely due to global filters - Now disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/3]] (not needed since there are global filters that disallow this specific type of spam filter 3 would have catched) - Specific user page spam - 1,101 hits most recent 7 March 2026 - Still active - Kept enabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/4]] (looking at the logs, there are too many false positives) - Questionable Language (profanity) - 6,055 hits including very recently - However it was logging hits without taking any actions - Edited to reduce likelihood of false positives by only applying filter to users with low (< 20) edit count and applied weak actions to tag and warn but not prevent publishing the content
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/5]] (no hits since 2023) - Blocked Solicitation Links - 95 hits; none since 2023 - blocks specific historical spam sites - Non-active - Now disabled
* Abuse filters 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 (these filters are not needed anymore) - Not reviewed - They are currently disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/17]] (no hits since 2022) - Fundamental Physics Edits - 347 hits; none since 2022 - Non-active and very specific for a historical issue - Now disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/19]] (no hits since 2019) - Page Creation - 20 hits; none since 2019 - Retained for historical reference and possible future updates - Now disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/21]] (false positives, vandal currently inactive) - Globally Banned Editor (renamed to Low-edit Spam Monitor) - 2,829 hits including very recent - Only applies to users with less than 5 edits and takes no actions / monitoring only - Reviewing the details of the hits I don't see many false positives and have strengthened its actions to add a tag and warning
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:57, 9 April 2026 (UTC)
== Block request ==
Please block ~2026-20985-80/~2026-21079-90/~2026-21223-88. Reason: Vandalism. [[User:Àncilu|Àncilu]] ([[User talk:Àncilu|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Àncilu|contribs]]) 23:24, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:All edits should be deleted and the first is blocked by Atcovi. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:33, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
== Antispam - Filter 12 ==
{{ping|Codename Noreste}} Thanks for contacting me with a suggested [[Special:AbuseFilter|abuse filter]] for the coupon spam we've been getting. A very much appreciated time saver. Per your suggestion, abuse filter 12 has been reactivated with your updated regex. It should tag and prevent page creation actions for coupon promo etc. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:33, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Please do the following to filter 12:
:# Enable the block action (temporary for unregistered users, indefinite for registered users)
:# Disable both the disallow and tag actions, since that filter will be set to block
: Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:42, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::Excellent. Done:
::* Block duration for non-registered users = 1 week
::* Block duration for registered users = indefinite
::* Disallow and tagging disabled
::Thankyou. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:24, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
== Urgent! error message This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed ==
While submitting the post this error was coming "This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed. If you believe your action was constructive, please inform an administrator of what you were trying to do. A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: New User Created Page with External Link" How to resolve it?
Here is the content:
{{note|marketing material removed}}
[[User:EasyshikshaMarketing|EasyshikshaMarketing]] ([[User talk:EasyshikshaMarketing|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/EasyshikshaMarketing|contribs]]) 05:14, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
: That's because Wikiversity doesn't accept advertising. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::So this is fine
::'''Online Internship and Digital Learning for Students'''
::Online learning has become an important part of modern education. With the help of the internet and digital tools, students can now study, practice, and gain experience without being physically present in a classroom. One key part of this system is the online internship, which helps students learn real-world skills along with their studies.
::An online internship allows students to work on tasks and projects through digital platforms. This makes learning more practical and useful, especially for those who want to understand how real work environments function.
::'''Background'''
::The concept of online learning developed from distance education, where students learned from remote locations. Over time, with the growth of digital technology, learning has become more interactive and flexible.
::The introduction of the online internship has added another important layer to digital education. It combines theoretical learning with practical experience, helping students prepare for future careers.
::During global events such as the COVID-19 pandemic, online education and online internship programs became essential. They helped students continue learning and gaining experience despite restrictions on physical movement.
::'''Importance of Online Internship'''
::An online internship plays an important role in student development. It helps bridge the gap between academic knowledge and practical skills.
::'''Some key points include:'''
::Students understand how real work is done
::They develop basic professional skills
::It supports career readiness
::It allows learning without location limits
::By participating in an online internship, students can improve their confidence and gain early exposure to different fields.
::'''Features of Online Internship-Based Learning'''
::Modern education platforms often include online internship opportunities as part of their learning system. These usually offer:
::Flexible schedules for students
::Access to learning from home
::Beginner-friendly tasks and projects
::A combination of theory and practice
::Such features make online internship programs suitable for a wide range of learners, including beginners.
::'''Learning Tasks'''
::Explore how online internship programs support student learning in digital environments.
::Identify how students can gain practical experience through an online internship
::Analyze the role of flexible learning in improving student engagement
::Understand how online education and internships work together
::'''References'''
::[https://ijpsl.in/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/E-Learning_Hanaaya-Navaneeth.pdf The Past, Present and Future of E-Learning: Hanaaya Varyani and Navaneeth M S]
::[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9788102 Current Trends and Future Perspectives of e-Learning in India]
::'''See Also'''
::[https://easyshiksha.com/online_courses/internship Online Internship]
::[https://easyshiksha.com/online_courses/ Online Courses]
::[https://easyshiksha.com/online_courses/kids-learning Kids Learning]
::[https://easyshiksha.com/career_helper/ Career Guidance] [[User:EasyshikshaMarketing|EasyshikshaMarketing]] ([[User talk:EasyshikshaMarketing|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/EasyshikshaMarketing|contribs]]) 05:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::@[[User:EasyshikshaMarketing|EasyshikshaMarketing]] Wikiversity is a resource for education, or a space for education. However, your intention to link to another website is obvious, and such content does not belong here, as it contradicts the purpose of Wikiversity. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 11:38, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
==AI-generated images==
Seeking your advice.
Myself and students use some AI-generated images in the [[Motivation and emotion]] project.
[[User:Dronebogus]] has been removing some of these images from Wikiversity pages and nominating them for deletion at Commons. As a result, some have been deleted and some have been kept.
Dronebogus has made some useful edits and image suggestions for [[Motivation and emotion]] which I've appreciated and incorporated. However, there are other edits to remove an AI image by Dronebogus that I've reverted where I think the image is more educational than no image or an alternative image suggested by Dronebogus.
There are a couple of pages where Dronebogus has reverted my reversion, so we are at risk of edit warring. We have briefly discussed and warned each other on our user talk pages, but it seems to come down to a difference in perception about the educational usefulness of the AI images.
So, I'm asking here for others to please review the recent edit histories for these pages:
* [[Motivation and emotion/Lectures/Brain and physiological needs]]
* [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2025/Stockholm syndrome emotion]]
and let us know what you think about the AI image suitability vs. using no image or alternative images suggested by Dronebogus.
Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:45, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
:I think Jtneill needs to try harder to find non-AI alternatives both on Commons and the web. I’m not reiterating the well known problems with generative AI— you can read about those on Wikipedia and the broader Internet. Needless to say it’s kind of just inherently toxic. If you use it, it should be the last resort of last resorts. Just my stance, which I consider perfectly valid and reasonable. [[User:Dronebogus|Dronebogus]] ([[User talk:Dronebogus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dronebogus|contribs]]) 04:10, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Request for Page Creation Approval - Research on Dr. Ian Stevenson ==
'''Hello Administrators,'''
I am a digital archivist and researcher attempting to create an educational page regarding Dr. Ian Stevenson's scientific work, specifically titled "Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect" and its official Vietnamese edition.
My edits are purely constructive, aimed at integrating local research context with global structured data (including '''Wikidata Q139548587'''). The automated filter is currently preventing publication due to "new user external link limits."
I have ensured that all citations, references, and images (sourced from Wikimedia Commons) are strictly academic and non-promotional. Could you please review my contributions and consider whitelisting my account or approving this specific page creation?
Thank you for your assistance in preserving this research '''legacy''' within the open knowledge ecosystem.
'''Best regards,''' [[User:Ian Stevenson777|Ian Stevenson777]] ([[User talk:Ian Stevenson777|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ian Stevenson777|contribs]]) 07:26, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
: The page title should probably be in English, as this is English Wikiversity. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:19, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Ian Stevenson777|Ian Stevenson777]] I looked at the text and it seems to me that it is informative, but the user cannot learn anything from it because they would have to buy the book. In this regard, it seems to me that it is enough [[:w:Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect|to have that article on Wikipedia]] and there is no need to duplicate it here on Wikiversity. If you are particularly interested with its Vietnamese translation, I would focus on Vietnamese Wikipedia, but it seems to me, that the article there [https://vi.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=N%C6%A1i_lu%C3%A2n_h%E1%BB%93i_v%C3%A0_sinh_h%E1%BB%8Dc_giao_nhau&oldid=75029095 have some problems at the moment]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:51, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:This request is AI-generated and was made by a lock evading LTA. Please ignore it. [[User:NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh|NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh]] ([[User talk:NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh|contribs]]) 23:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodians and bureaucrats ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved to [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:46, 12 May 2026 (UTC)''</div>
== Interface administrator flag request ==
@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Mu301|Mu301]] I am requesting IA flag to delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]]. It was requested for deletion by [[User:Sophivorus|a trusted user]] and I think it can be deleted. Once I delete it, I will notify you and you can remove the flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:24, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Can you enable two-factor authentication?
:Policy: [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:27, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:20, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::You are an interface administrator for 24 hours. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:57, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Thx @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I have just deleted the page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:59, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Block request ==
Hi. Please block @[[User:Skibidi Titan 5.0|Skibidi Titan 5.0]]. Reason : Vandalism.
Thanks, [[User:Locpac|Locpac]] ([[User talk:Locpac|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Locpac|contribs]]) 15:10, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thankyou. Done. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 15:25, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
== ~2026-28496-53 ==
Please block [[Special:Contribs/~2026-28496-53]], vandalism. [[User:Tenshi Hinanawi|Tenshi Hinanawi]] ([[User talk:Tenshi Hinanawi|トーク]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tenshi Hinanawi|投稿記録]]) 17:02, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{done}} Thank you! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 17:14, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== ~2026-28792-52 ==
Please block [[Special:Contribs/~2026-28792-52]], vandalism. Appears to be same user as above. [[User:Tenshi Hinanawi|Tenshi Hinanawi]] ([[User talk:Tenshi Hinanawi|トーク]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tenshi Hinanawi|投稿記録]]) 17:38, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
: Blocked locally by Barras. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:46, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
tj11ewtgeu9ll3lu3d8bcextqom8mbs
2809013
2808992
2026-05-14T01:31:16Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
+
2809013
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{/Header}}
== Dan Polansky ==
I would like to ask you to assess the behavior of Dan Polansky, who in my opinion continues to violate [[Wikiversity:Etiquette|Etiquette]], calls users who disagree with him trolls, [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Harold_Foppele&oldid=2760143#Your_qualification questions their expertise], tests them, etc. This is most evident in [[Wikiversity:Community Review/Dan Polansky]], where he has already indicated that two discussion opponents are trolls. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:05, 18 November 2025 (UTC)
: The coddling of overt disruptor Harold Foppele (substantiation is in RCA above) and proven provocateur and disruptor Juandev (substantiation in CR above) must stop. The English Wikiversity must start to properly curate its content and discipline disruptive editors. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:10, 18 November 2025 (UTC)
:[[Wikiversity:Community Review/Dan Polansky]] is underway; outcome pending. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:03, 27 November 2025 (UTC)
::It has been closed with consensus to ban him indefinitely from this project, I believe there is nothing else to do here. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:06, 11 March 2026 (UTC)
== Sidewide count.js ==
i would like something like: [[Template:User contrib count/count.js]]. i created [[Template:User contrib count]] and a user/common.js. {{User contrib count}}.<br><br> so a "count.js" would complete it. See [[User:Harold Foppele/common.js]].
If an Administrator could help please. Cheers [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 19:22, 18 January 2026 (UTC)
== need to add my profile ==
im trying to add new profile content [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 18:03, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
:You can edit it now. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 18:05, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
::where can create a new one [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 18:51, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
:::i have created and its in sandbox. i would like to know when it will be approved [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 19:38, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
::::Please don’t create [[wv:spam|spam]] pages as it will be deleted. Please also read [[WV:Scope]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 04:01, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
== Im trying to add new profile while add content its shows not alowed ==
This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed. If you believe your action was constructive, please [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|inform an administrator]] of what you were trying to do. A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: New User Exceeded New Page Limit
This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed. If you believe your action was constructive, please [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action|inform an administrator]] of what you were trying to do. A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: New User Created Page with External Link [[User:PAGURUMURTHY|PAGURUMURTHY]] ([[User talk:PAGURUMURTHY|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PAGURUMURTHY|contribs]]) 18:51, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
== New User: cannot create talk page ==
Hi, I am a new user of Wikiversity and I wanted to create a talk page for the article [[ChatGPT's Essay on Kohlberg's Theory: AI's Use in Academic Writing]]. As a new user, I was barred from performing this action. The text that I wanted to add to the talk page is:
<blockquote>
I have doubts as to to the reliability of this essay. Take for rexample the sentence:
<blockquote>
Due to its efficiency, AI has saved 380,000-403,000 lives per year in European healthcare as reported in a recent Deloitte and MedTech Europe report<ref>Dantas, C., Mackiewicz, K., Tageo, V., Jacucci, G., Guardado, D., Ortet, S., Varlamis, I., Maniadakis, M., De Lera, E., Quintas, J., Kocsis, O., & Vassiliou, C. (2021). Benefits and hurdles of AI in the workplace – what comes next? ''International Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems, 10'', 9-17. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351993615_Benefits_and_Hurdles_of_AI_In_The_Workplace_-What_Comes_Next</ref>.
</blockquote>
Reading the reference (freely available on ResearchGate), one notes:
# that the reference is from 2021 (predating the widespread use of LLMs such as ChatGPT and the associated 'AI' boom), and
# that the reference factually contradicts this essay.
Quoting from the reference:
<blockquote>
There are enormous benefits of applying AI-based solutions to monitor workers’ health and prevent accidents or, currently, COVID-19 infections, and those benefits are reported with enormous potential. According to the recent Deloitte and MedTech Europe report [11], implementing AI in European healthcare systems could save up 380,000 to 403,000 lives annually or €170.9 to 212.4 billion per year.
</blockquote>
Not that the reference says ''could save'', not ''saves'' as in the essay.
This calls into question the reliability of the essay.
</blockquote>
Could an administrator make this addition for me? Thank you!
{{reflist}}
[[User:Æolus|Æolus]] ([[User talk:Æolus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Æolus|contribs]]) 06:53, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Æolus|Æolus]] I have added it for you, you can change the header and sign it now. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 08:05, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you! [[User:Æolus|Æolus]] ([[User talk:Æolus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Æolus|contribs]]) 12:43, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
== Disallowed to add a page on a course ==
I'm trying to populate a newly created course on Wikiversity, but it blocks me from creating more pages with "New User Exceeded New Page Limit". Could this be lifted please? [[User:Berkeleywho|Berkeleywho]] ([[User talk:Berkeleywho|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Berkeleywho|contribs]]) 13:21, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
:Sorry! Never mind. I was trying to create a new article instead of a new page. All good now. [[User:Berkeleywho|Berkeleywho]] ([[User talk:Berkeleywho|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Berkeleywho|contribs]]) 14:03, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
== Harold Foppele adding LLM-generated nonsense and personal fiction ==
I became aware of [[User:Harold Foppele]]'s editing after I deleted some of his uploads on Commons. He appears to be adding a large amount of text and images that are some combination of personal fiction and LLM-generated nonsense. This includes:
*[[Quantum Ultra fast lasers#Future thought experiment|Personal speculative fiction]] in an otherwise "nonfiction" article
*Uploading nonsense LLM-created [[:File:Rontosecond pulse laser (Schematic).jpg|diagrams]] and [[:File:Rontosecond pulse laser (Futuristic).jpg|renders]] for nonexistent lab equipment, with fake source (on Commons, he indicated these files as having been created by him using an LLM)
*Uploading nonsense LLM-created images of equations with obvious artifacts. These images, such as [[:File:Redfield equation (non-Markovian).png]] and [[:File:Lindblad equation (Markovian).png]], don't even match the text he puts them with.
Much of his writing is also of extremely poor quality, to the point where it's not clear whether it's written by him or an LLM. I'm not an active editor on this project, so I'm not as familiar with the standards here, but I believe this is worth custodian attention. [[User:Pi.1415926535|Pi.1415926535]] ([[User talk:Pi.1415926535|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Pi.1415926535|contribs]]) 03:06, 23 February 2026 (UTC)
:Fake source ''and'' contradictory copyright info, claiming both public domain and CC license. Moreover, if they are indeed nearly-direct LLM output, depending on jurisdiction they may not even be eligible for copyright.
:I've put speedy deletion marks for the equations, because they're obviously not coherent mathematical equations (the parentheses don't match, the symbols merge into each other the way text in image models often do, etc) [[User:Sesquilinear|Sesquilinear]] ([[User talk:Sesquilinear|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Sesquilinear|contribs]]) 21:50, 7 March 2026 (UTC)
== Repeated removal of RFD notices by Harold Foppele ==
{{User|Harold Foppele }}
This editor is appearing in multiple noticeboards for behaviour which is contentious. Ther latest adventure is the repeated removal of tye RFD notice at [[Quantum/Henry C. Kapteyn]]. You will see from their contributions record the number of times. I have warned Tham on their user tag page that this is tantaomunt to volunteering to be blocked here. They have a track record of achieving blocks on enWiki and Commons already.
They have all the appearance of shooting not to understand when given direct information about their behaviour, whichever project they are editing, and are fast becoming a time sink. Their behaviour across multiple WMF sites may well lead to a Global Lock, but I do not believe they have quite reached the threshold for that.
I believe that what is required is a preventative block to seek to ensure thatchy understand the seriousness of their behaviour, and the need to be collegial. 🇵🇸‍🇺🇦 [[User:Timtrent|Timtrent]] 🇺🇦 [[User talk:Timtrent|talk to me]] 🇺🇦‍🇵🇸 23:03, 4 March 2026 (UTC)
: {{Done}} [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 11:45, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
== Blocks for sockpuppet ==
Please block [[User:Harold Foppele]] and [[User:Johnwilliamsiii]] for sockpuppetry based on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Sockpuppet_investigations/Harold_Foppele en wiki] CU and [https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?diff=1177465640 commons] CU investigations. The user has also violated copyright, see the above discussion. A block is necessary to prevent further abuse. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 11:30, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
:<small>@[[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]]</small> [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 11:31, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
:: {{Done}} [[User:MathXplore|MathXplore]] ([[User talk:MathXplore|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/MathXplore|contribs]]) 11:44, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
:CC. @[[User:Timtrent|Timtrent]], @[[User:Sesquilinear|Sesquilinear]], @[[User:Pi.1415926535|Pi.1415926535]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 11:33, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you for the ping. I concur based on [[w:en:WP:DUCK|behaviour]]. CUs appear divided. 🇵🇸‍🇺🇦 [[User:Timtrent|Timtrent]] 🇺🇦 [[User talk:Timtrent|talk to me]] 🇺🇦‍🇵🇸 11:41, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
== Problem when trying to start a discussion with authors of the Plurilingual education portal ==
The authors I wanted to discuss with are called "Project PEP" and my name is Franch Chandler. How can I be allowed to do so ? [[User:French Chandler|French Chandler]] ([[User talk:French Chandler|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/French Chandler|contribs]]) 18:25, 16 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:French Chandler|French Chandler]] place your qestion [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Projet_PEP&action=edit into the dialog box] on this link and hit Publish page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:22, 16 March 2026 (UTC)
== Please publish my post ==
My post is about "Every child grows and develops at their own pace, but some may experience challenges that affect their ability to perform everyday tasks. These challenges can include difficulties with fine motor skills, sensory processing, handwriting, feeding, and self-regulation. When these issues are not addressed early, they can impact a child’s confidence, academic performance, and independence.
With the rise of digital healthcare services, '''online physical therapy''' has emerged as a powerful and accessible solution for parents seeking support for their children. This modern approach provides structured, personalized therapy programs that can be accessed from the comfort of home, making it easier for families to ensure consistent care." [[User:Skyabovetherapy|Skyabovetherapy]] ([[User talk:Skyabovetherapy|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Skyabovetherapy|contribs]]) 12:28, 28 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Skyabovetherapy|Skyabovetherapy]] Well, you can publish it yourself, Wikiversity is a free environement, where everybody can create educational resources. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 14:11, 29 March 2026 (UTC)
::They actually triggered some abuse filters. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:24, 29 March 2026 (UTC)
:I looked at your attempts to add this text and I see a link to one website repeated many times, which reminds me of the misuse of Wikiversity for self-promotion or to increase the importance of the website. It is necessary to remind you here that Wikiversity is not a place for promotion, but a place for education. So if you want to educate, it will not be a problem to create the page without external links with a clearly defined procedure for how people should use it and what to expect from it. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 18:07, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== New user limit ==
Hi, I am creating an AIPA Method learning resource page.
I am the author of the linked research, and I hit the “new user limit” and “new page with external link” filters while publishing.
Here is the link to the page in creation: [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=AIPA_Method&veaction=edit]
Thank you for your help.
Best regards,
Senad Dizdarević [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 07:19, 30 March 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] I should admit I dont know, what is "new user limit", but if filter blocks your page because of certain external link, you may force to save anyway and sometimes it works. It should not work, when the website is blacklisted. As of now, I am not seeing you to save page in main namespace, so try to save it without external links first. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 07:30, 30 March 2026 (UTC)
::Thank you, you are very kind.
::I will wait a day, and try again (without links, too).
::Today, I already created About Me info page, and maybe that is enough for the filters for one day. [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 07:53, 30 March 2026 (UTC)
:::Well, I have analyzed your contribution to Wikiversity and I should point out here, that this project is not a place for advertising, so there is no way of promoting your books and authority this way. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:56, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Hi, my About Me page is just an info page with the neutral as possible presentation of my work.
::::There is a big difference between informing and advertising. Informing is neutrally stating that something exists and requiring no action, while advertising is a special communication form with intent to cause certain action from readers. For example, click here, click there, order this, buy that.
::::There is no such intention, form, or terms on my info page. Just neutral information. I don't hide and I am not ashamed that I am write and author, and that is a part of the usual bio, including works. I checked your user page: "I graduated from the Czech University of Life Sciences in Prague and studied information science at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University." I think that if you had written a book on Life Science, you would have mentioned that as well.
::::Most of the Info page is about my research and AIPA Method which is a valid contribution to psychology, consciousness studies, identity theory, and personality development. Actually, my paper '''AIPA Method: A Cognitive-Phenomenological Model for Identity Reconstruction and Stabilization in Pure Awareness''' is now in the peer review procedure at Journal of Consciousness Studies.
::::Here is a part from the Wikiversity AIPA Method page in creation (waiting for the end of the time limit for new users): [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 06:47, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::For the unknown reasons, the form didn't publish my second part of the message:
:::::I believe this is a valid contribution to Wikiversity.
:::::Best Regards,
:::::Senad [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 06:52, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
::::::And the third try:
:::::: == Introduction ==
::::::The AIPA Method addresses a gap in contemporary personal development and consciousness science: most evidence‑based approaches (CBT, MBSR, MBCT, standard meditation) operate at the level of mental content—reframing thoughts, observing them, or reducing their impact—rather than at the level of identity structure. In contrast, AIPA targets the structural relationship between the self and the mind, aiming at durable identity reconstruction rooted in Pure Awareness rather than symptom management.
::::::The central research question of the primary AIPA preprint is whether a structured, sequentially staged method can produce permanent identity reconstruction rooted in Pure Awareness, and how such a method compares to established approaches in scope, mechanism, and outcome.
:::::: == Theoretical foundations ==
::::::The AIPA framework is grounded in the cognitive‑phenomenological tradition (e.g., McAdams, Varela, Metzinger, Erikson), contemporary consciousness science on minimal phenomenal experience, and qualitative methods advocacy in psychology. It builds directly on:
::::::* Empirical work on pure awareness and Minimal Phenomenal Experience (MPE), especially Gamma & Metzinger’s large‑scale study of content‑reduced awareness states.
::::::* Metzinger’s proposal of minimal phenomenal experience as an entry point for a minimal unifying model of consciousness.
::::::* Narrative identity and partial‑self models within personality and identity theory.
::::::Within this backdrop, AIPA proposes Pure Awareness as a distinct, operationally specified state that can become a structural ground of identity rather than a transient meditative experience.
:::::: == Experiential empiricism ==
::::::The empirical foundation of the AIPA Method is explicitly first‑person and experiential, combining:
::::::* A 22‑year longitudinal autoethnographic self‑study (2003–2025) documenting partial personality episodes, protocol use, and outcomes.
::::::* A 13‑year prospective verification period with zero self‑reported recurrence of targeted harmful behaviors after a dated stabilization point (1 January 2006).
::::::* A high‑ecological‑validity “stress test” during acute bereavement, used to examine whether non‑reactive awareness remains stable under maximal provocation.
::::::* Two independent practitioner cases (an Amazon‑verified report and a structured questionnaire case) providing preliminary convergent signals across cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and identity dimensions.
::::::All central constructs (Pure Awareness, partial personalities, the Switch, identity stabilization) are operationalized with explicit phenomenological and behavioral criteria intended to enable replication and future third‑person measurement.
::::::I believe this is a valid contribution to Wikiversity.
::::::Best regards,
::::::Senad [[User:Senad Dizdarević|Senad Dizdarević]] ([[User talk:Senad Dizdarević|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Senad Dizdarević|contribs]]) 06:54, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
== Unable to publish pages ==
Whenever I try to publish a page with linked sources it gets flagged and says I'm a new user attempting to publish content with outside links. Those outside links are my sources. [[User:Soboyed|Soboyed]] ([[User talk:Soboyed|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Soboyed|contribs]]) 04:52, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
:This restriction is automatically lifted after you have edited for a certain time (I don't recall that time off-hand, but it is not long). This is designed to stop spam. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 04:53, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
== Showing error to publish a Post ==
My action was constructive, not destructive, please allow to publish it. [[Special:Contributions/~2026-20906-18|~2026-20906-18]] ([[User talk:~2026-20906-18|talk]]) 08:06, 4 April 2026 (UTC)
:Maybe you got caught in a filter. Consider [[Special:CreateAccount|creating an account]]. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:06, 4 April 2026 (UTC)
:Your edits, [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Special:AbuseLog&wpSearchUser=%7E2026-20906-18 these ones], seems to have tripped a filter when you tried to create a page on [[Create]] which external links. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:58, 4 April 2026 (UTC)
:Have you read my [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action&diff=prev&oldid=2802219 previous reply] to you @[[User:~2026-20906-18|~2026-20906-18]]? [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:02, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
== Abuse filters which should be deleted ==
Hi, there are some abuse filters which should probably be deleted.
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/1]] (not needed anymore)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/2]] (no hits since 2018)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/3]] (not needed since there are global filters that disallow this specific type of spam filter 3 would have catched)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/4]] (looking at the logs, there are too many false positives)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/5]] (no hits since 2023)
* Abuse filters 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 (these filters are not needed anymore)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/17]] (no hits since 2022)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/19]] (no hits since 2019)
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/21]] (false positives, vandal currently inactive)
Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:51, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:Why do these need to be deleted rather than inactivated? Do inactive abuse filters cause a server strain? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:39, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:: Deleted filters do not cause strain to the servers. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:28, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:These sounds like sensible suggestions but, yes, would inactivation perhaps make more sense than deletion for at least some filters? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:35, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:I would keep them @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]]. Alternatively, I would turn off the ones that haven't caught anything for a long time, but I would leave them enabled in case they need to be turned on or improved. If someone has already written the code and we don't have hundreds of free man-hours of programmers on Wikiversity, the server load seems secondary to me, and is negligible compared to other things. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:11, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
:: I know how to write abuse filter code and regex, but I would recommend disabling filters that have never caught anything in a long time ''and'' those who made lots of false positives. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:09, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
:::Of course @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]], there are people here today who are capable of changing the code. But the question is what it will be like in a few years, the question is what will happen if those two are busy for a long time, etc. That's why I would leave it so that those who don't know much about code can be inspired by it and will need to do something with it someday - plus, more code for different types of filtering is actually great educational material on how those filters work. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 11:41, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
Here's the updated list of abuse filters under review with actions I've taken (several disabled, one basic code improvement, and some actions changed) - none have been deleted so they can all be edited and reactivayed - please suggest any further changes:
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/1]] (not needed anymore) - One time account spam bot - 4 hits over 10 years ago - Disabled in 2024 - May be useful in future
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/2]] (no hits since 2018) - Userspace spamming - 778 hits; none since 2018 likely due to global filters - Now disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/3]] (not needed since there are global filters that disallow this specific type of spam filter 3 would have catched) - Specific user page spam - 1,101 hits most recent 7 March 2026 - Still active - Kept enabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/4]] (looking at the logs, there are too many false positives) - Questionable Language (profanity) - 6,055 hits including very recently - However it was logging hits without taking any actions - Edited to reduce likelihood of false positives by only applying filter to users with low (< 20) edit count and applied weak actions to tag and warn but not prevent publishing the content
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/5]] (no hits since 2023) - Blocked Solicitation Links - 95 hits; none since 2023 - blocks specific historical spam sites - Non-active - Now disabled
* Abuse filters 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 (these filters are not needed anymore) - Not reviewed - They are currently disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/17]] (no hits since 2022) - Fundamental Physics Edits - 347 hits; none since 2022 - Non-active and very specific for a historical issue - Now disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/19]] (no hits since 2019) - Page Creation - 20 hits; none since 2019 - Retained for historical reference and possible future updates - Now disabled
* [[Special:AbuseFilter/21]] (false positives, vandal currently inactive) - Globally Banned Editor (renamed to Low-edit Spam Monitor) - 2,829 hits including very recent - Only applies to users with less than 5 edits and takes no actions / monitoring only - Reviewing the details of the hits I don't see many false positives and have strengthened its actions to add a tag and warning
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:57, 9 April 2026 (UTC)
== Block request ==
Please block ~2026-20985-80/~2026-21079-90/~2026-21223-88. Reason: Vandalism. [[User:Àncilu|Àncilu]] ([[User talk:Àncilu|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Àncilu|contribs]]) 23:24, 5 April 2026 (UTC)
:All edits should be deleted and the first is blocked by Atcovi. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 00:33, 6 April 2026 (UTC)
== Antispam - Filter 12 ==
{{ping|Codename Noreste}} Thanks for contacting me with a suggested [[Special:AbuseFilter|abuse filter]] for the coupon spam we've been getting. A very much appreciated time saver. Per your suggestion, abuse filter 12 has been reactivated with your updated regex. It should tag and prevent page creation actions for coupon promo etc. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:33, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
: @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] Please do the following to filter 12:
:# Enable the block action (temporary for unregistered users, indefinite for registered users)
:# Disable both the disallow and tag actions, since that filter will be set to block
: Thank you. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 13:42, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
::Excellent. Done:
::* Block duration for non-registered users = 1 week
::* Block duration for registered users = indefinite
::* Disallow and tagging disabled
::Thankyou. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:24, 9 May 2026 (UTC)
== Urgent! error message This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed ==
While submitting the post this error was coming "This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful, and therefore disallowed. If you believe your action was constructive, please inform an administrator of what you were trying to do. A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: New User Created Page with External Link" How to resolve it?
Here is the content:
{{note|marketing material removed}}
[[User:EasyshikshaMarketing|EasyshikshaMarketing]] ([[User talk:EasyshikshaMarketing|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/EasyshikshaMarketing|contribs]]) 05:14, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
: That's because Wikiversity doesn't accept advertising. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 05:20, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
::So this is fine
::'''Online Internship and Digital Learning for Students'''
::Online learning has become an important part of modern education. With the help of the internet and digital tools, students can now study, practice, and gain experience without being physically present in a classroom. One key part of this system is the online internship, which helps students learn real-world skills along with their studies.
::An online internship allows students to work on tasks and projects through digital platforms. This makes learning more practical and useful, especially for those who want to understand how real work environments function.
::'''Background'''
::The concept of online learning developed from distance education, where students learned from remote locations. Over time, with the growth of digital technology, learning has become more interactive and flexible.
::The introduction of the online internship has added another important layer to digital education. It combines theoretical learning with practical experience, helping students prepare for future careers.
::During global events such as the COVID-19 pandemic, online education and online internship programs became essential. They helped students continue learning and gaining experience despite restrictions on physical movement.
::'''Importance of Online Internship'''
::An online internship plays an important role in student development. It helps bridge the gap between academic knowledge and practical skills.
::'''Some key points include:'''
::Students understand how real work is done
::They develop basic professional skills
::It supports career readiness
::It allows learning without location limits
::By participating in an online internship, students can improve their confidence and gain early exposure to different fields.
::'''Features of Online Internship-Based Learning'''
::Modern education platforms often include online internship opportunities as part of their learning system. These usually offer:
::Flexible schedules for students
::Access to learning from home
::Beginner-friendly tasks and projects
::A combination of theory and practice
::Such features make online internship programs suitable for a wide range of learners, including beginners.
::'''Learning Tasks'''
::Explore how online internship programs support student learning in digital environments.
::Identify how students can gain practical experience through an online internship
::Analyze the role of flexible learning in improving student engagement
::Understand how online education and internships work together
::'''References'''
::[https://ijpsl.in/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/E-Learning_Hanaaya-Navaneeth.pdf The Past, Present and Future of E-Learning: Hanaaya Varyani and Navaneeth M S]
::[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9788102 Current Trends and Future Perspectives of e-Learning in India]
::'''See Also'''
::[https://easyshiksha.com/online_courses/internship Online Internship]
::[https://easyshiksha.com/online_courses/ Online Courses]
::[https://easyshiksha.com/online_courses/kids-learning Kids Learning]
::[https://easyshiksha.com/career_helper/ Career Guidance] [[User:EasyshikshaMarketing|EasyshikshaMarketing]] ([[User talk:EasyshikshaMarketing|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/EasyshikshaMarketing|contribs]]) 05:27, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
:::@[[User:EasyshikshaMarketing|EasyshikshaMarketing]] Wikiversity is a resource for education, or a space for education. However, your intention to link to another website is obvious, and such content does not belong here, as it contradicts the purpose of Wikiversity. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 11:38, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
==AI-generated images==
Seeking your advice.
Myself and students use some AI-generated images in the [[Motivation and emotion]] project.
[[User:Dronebogus]] has been removing some of these images from Wikiversity pages and nominating them for deletion at Commons. As a result, some have been deleted and some have been kept.
Dronebogus has made some useful edits and image suggestions for [[Motivation and emotion]] which I've appreciated and incorporated. However, there are other edits to remove an AI image by Dronebogus that I've reverted where I think the image is more educational than no image or an alternative image suggested by Dronebogus.
There are a couple of pages where Dronebogus has reverted my reversion, so we are at risk of edit warring. We have briefly discussed and warned each other on our user talk pages, but it seems to come down to a difference in perception about the educational usefulness of the AI images.
So, I'm asking here for others to please review the recent edit histories for these pages:
* [[Motivation and emotion/Lectures/Brain and physiological needs]]
* [[Motivation and emotion/Book/2025/Stockholm syndrome emotion]]
and let us know what you think about the AI image suitability vs. using no image or alternative images suggested by Dronebogus.
Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 11:45, 26 April 2026 (UTC)
:I think Jtneill needs to try harder to find non-AI alternatives both on Commons and the web. I’m not reiterating the well known problems with generative AI— you can read about those on Wikipedia and the broader Internet. Needless to say it’s kind of just inherently toxic. If you use it, it should be the last resort of last resorts. Just my stance, which I consider perfectly valid and reasonable. [[User:Dronebogus|Dronebogus]] ([[User talk:Dronebogus|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dronebogus|contribs]]) 04:10, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
== Request for Page Creation Approval - Research on Dr. Ian Stevenson ==
'''Hello Administrators,'''
I am a digital archivist and researcher attempting to create an educational page regarding Dr. Ian Stevenson's scientific work, specifically titled "Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect" and its official Vietnamese edition.
My edits are purely constructive, aimed at integrating local research context with global structured data (including '''Wikidata Q139548587'''). The automated filter is currently preventing publication due to "new user external link limits."
I have ensured that all citations, references, and images (sourced from Wikimedia Commons) are strictly academic and non-promotional. Could you please review my contributions and consider whitelisting my account or approving this specific page creation?
Thank you for your assistance in preserving this research '''legacy''' within the open knowledge ecosystem.
'''Best regards,''' [[User:Ian Stevenson777|Ian Stevenson777]] ([[User talk:Ian Stevenson777|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ian Stevenson777|contribs]]) 07:26, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
: The page title should probably be in English, as this is English Wikiversity. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:19, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Ian Stevenson777|Ian Stevenson777]] I looked at the text and it seems to me that it is informative, but the user cannot learn anything from it because they would have to buy the book. In this regard, it seems to me that it is enough [[:w:Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect|to have that article on Wikipedia]] and there is no need to duplicate it here on Wikiversity. If you are particularly interested with its Vietnamese translation, I would focus on Vietnamese Wikipedia, but it seems to me, that the article there [https://vi.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=N%C6%A1i_lu%C3%A2n_h%E1%BB%93i_v%C3%A0_sinh_h%E1%BB%8Dc_giao_nhau&oldid=75029095 have some problems at the moment]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:51, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
:This request is AI-generated and was made by a lock evading LTA. Please ignore it. [[User:NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh|NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh]] ([[User talk:NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh|contribs]]) 23:58, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Call for custodians and bureaucrats ==
<div class="cd-moveMark">''Moved to [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:46, 12 May 2026 (UTC)''</div>
== Interface administrator flag request ==
@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], @[[User:Mu301|Mu301]] I am requesting IA flag to delete [[MediaWiki:Gadget-WikiSign.js]]. It was requested for deletion by [[User:Sophivorus|a trusted user]] and I think it can be deleted. Once I delete it, I will notify you and you can remove the flag. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:24, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Can you enable two-factor authentication?
:Policy: [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 10:27, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
::Done @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]]. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:20, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:::You are an interface administrator for 24 hours. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:57, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
::::Thx @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], I have just deleted the page. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:59, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== Block request ==
Hi. Please block @[[User:Skibidi Titan 5.0|Skibidi Titan 5.0]]. Reason : Vandalism.
Thanks, [[User:Locpac|Locpac]] ([[User talk:Locpac|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Locpac|contribs]]) 15:10, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
:Thankyou. Done. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 15:25, 10 May 2026 (UTC)
== ~2026-28496-53 ==
Please block [[Special:Contribs/~2026-28496-53]], vandalism. [[User:Tenshi Hinanawi|Tenshi Hinanawi]] ([[User talk:Tenshi Hinanawi|トーク]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tenshi Hinanawi|投稿記録]]) 17:02, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
:{{done}} Thank you! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 17:14, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
== ~2026-28792-52 ==
Please block [[Special:Contribs/~2026-28792-52]], vandalism. Appears to be same user as above. [[User:Tenshi Hinanawi|Tenshi Hinanawi]] ([[User talk:Tenshi Hinanawi|トーク]] • [[Special:Contributions/Tenshi Hinanawi|投稿記録]]) 17:38, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
: Blocked locally by Barras. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 17:46, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
bjj60gom30o27o7zvyxfxzzizr9ouxe
Wikiversity:Request custodian action/Header
4
83382
2809011
2778440
2026-05-14T01:29:09Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
Updating the header.
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wikitext
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{| style="margin-right:5px; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px"
| style="vertical-align:middle;padding: 10px;" |
{{Portal-head2|547892|Welcome}}
{{Administering Wikiversity}}
{{Shortcut|WV:RCA}}
[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity support staff]] are trusted users who have access to technical features (such as [[WV:PROTECT|protecting]] and [[WV:DELETE|deleting]] pages, [[WV:BLOCK|blocking]] users, and undoing these actions) that help with maintenance of Wikiversity.
You can '''[[Special:NewSection/Wikiversity:Request custodian action|create a new request]]'''. Sign with <code><nowiki>--~~~~</nowiki></code>.
Custodian requests:
* [[:Category:Wikiversity protected edit requests|Fully protected edit requests]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Wikiversity protected edit requests}})
* [[:Category:Candidates for speedy deletion|Candidates for speedy deletion]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Candidates for speedy deletion}})
* [[:Category:Proposed deletions|Proposed deletions (PRODs)]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Proposed deletions}})
* [[:Category:Requests for Deletion|Requests for deletion]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Requests for Deletion}})
* [[:Category:Requests for unblock|Requests for unblock]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Requests for unblock}})
* [[:Category:Possible copyright violations|Possible copyright violations]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Possible copyright violations}})
* [[:Category:History merge requests]] ({{PAGESINCAT:History merge requests}})
Other request pages:
* [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion|Requests for deletion]]
* [[Wikiversity:Import|Requests for importing]] (e.g., from Meta or Wikibooks):
* [[Wikiversity:Requests for CheckUser|Request for CheckUser]]
Other pages you may be looking for:
* [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Comment on custodian actions]]
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians|Notices for custodians]]
<includeonly>* [[/Archive/|Archive]] (old requests)</includeonly>
<inputbox>
bgcolor=transparent
type=fulltext
prefix=Wikiversity:Request custodian action
width=50
searchbuttonlabel=Search in the archives
</inputbox>
|}<includeonly>
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship]]
[[cs:Wikiverzita:Nástěnka správců]]
[[fr:Wikiversité:Requêtes aux bibliothécaires]]
[[pt:Wikiversidade:Pedidos a administradores]]
{{Nobots}}
__NEWSECTIONLINK__
</includeonly>
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2809026
2809011
2026-05-14T02:09:47Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
Updating to maintain consistency with [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians/Header]].
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text/x-wiki
<includeonly>__NEWSECTIONLINK__{{Nobots}}</includeonly>{{RoundBoxTop|theme=14}}
{{Portal-head2|2=Welcome}}
<hr>
{{Administering Wikiversity}}
{{Shortcut|WV:RCA}}
[[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity support staff]] are trusted users who have access to technical features (such as [[WV:PROTECT|protecting]] and [[WV:DELETE|deleting]] pages, [[WV:BLOCK|blocking]] users, and undoing these actions) that help with maintenance of Wikiversity.
You can '''[[Special:NewSection/Wikiversity:Request custodian action|create a new request]]'''. Sign with <code><nowiki>--~~~~</nowiki></code>.
Custodian requests:
* [[:Category:Wikiversity protected edit requests|Fully protected edit requests]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Wikiversity protected edit requests}})
* [[:Category:Candidates for speedy deletion|Candidates for speedy deletion]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Candidates for speedy deletion}})
* [[:Category:Proposed deletions|Proposed deletions (PRODs)]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Proposed deletions}})
* [[:Category:Requests for Deletion|Requests for deletion]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Requests for Deletion}})
* [[:Category:Requests for unblock|Requests for unblock]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Requests for unblock}})
* [[:Category:Possible copyright violations|Possible copyright violations]] ({{PAGESINCAT:Possible copyright violations}})
* [[:Category:History merge requests]] ({{PAGESINCAT:History merge requests}})
Other request pages:
* [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion|Requests for deletion]]
* [[Wikiversity:Import|Requests for importing]] (e.g., from Meta or Wikibooks):
* [[Wikiversity:Requests for CheckUser|Request for CheckUser]]
Other pages you may be looking for:
* [[Wikiversity:Custodian feedback|Comment on custodian actions]]
* [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians|Notices for custodians]]
<includeonly>* [[/Archive/|Archive]] (old requests)</includeonly>
<inputbox>
bgcolor=transparent
type=fulltext
prefix=Wikiversity:Request custodian action
width=50
searchbuttonlabel=Search in the archives
</inputbox>
{{RoundBoxBottom}}<includeonly>
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship]]
[[cs:Wikiverzita:Nástěnka správců]]
[[fr:Wikiversité:Requêtes aux bibliothécaires]]
[[pt:Wikiversidade:Pedidos a administradores]]
</includeonly>
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Wikiversity:Notices for custodians/Archive
4
83480
2809002
2086976
2026-05-14T00:33:44Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
+
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wikitext
text/x-wiki
Archives for [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians]]
* [[/1]] (2006-2008)
* [[/2]] (2009)
* [[/3]] (2009-2012)
* [[/4]] (2013-2015)
* [[/5]] (2016-2018)
* [[/6]] (2019-2020)
* [[/7]] (2021-)
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Template:Daughters
10
84064
2809120
2803307
2026-05-14T10:55:40Z
Jtneill
10242
Comment out Wikinews because its closed
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<div style="">
[[File:Wikimedia_Community_Logo.svg|25px|link=Meta]]
[[File:Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg|25px|link=Wikipedia]]
[[File:Wiktionary-logo-v2.svg|25px|link=Wiktionary]]
[[File:Wikibooks-logo.svg|25px|link=Wikibooks]]
[[File:Wikiquote-logo.svg|25px|link=Wikiquote]]
[[File:Wikisource-logo.svg|25px|link=Wikisource]]
[[File:Wikiversity-logo-Snorky.svg|25px|link=Wikiversity]]
[[File:Wikispecies-logo.svg|25px|link=Wikispecies]]
[[File:Commons-logo.svg|25px|link=Commons]]
[[File:Wikidata-logo.svg|25px|link=Wikidata]]
[[File:Wikivoyage-logo.svg|25px|link=Wikivoyage]]
[[File:MediaWiki-2020-icon.svg|25px|link=MediaWiki]]<!--
[[File:Wikinews-logo.svg|25px|link=Wikinews]] now closed -->
</div>
<noinclude>[[Category:Sister project templates]]</noinclude>
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Category:Wikinews
14
96141
2808973
1674743
2026-05-13T22:56:08Z
Jtneill
10242
+ [[Category:Journalism]]
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text/x-wiki
[[Category:Journalism]]
[[Category:Wikimedia|N]]
[[Category:Wiki]]
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MediaWiki:Revdelete-confirm
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2809030
584932
2026-05-14T02:27:46Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
/* top */ Adding mw-parser-output. using [[Project:AWB|AWB]]
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<div class="mw-parser-output">
{{mbox|text=There is currently no policy regarding the use of [[Wikiversity:Revision deletion|revision deletion]] on Wikiversity. It is suggested that custodians might wish to refer to [[w:Wikipedia:Revision deletion|Wikipedia:Revision deletion]] for guidance. In the interests of transparency, this feature should be used with caution. Routine [[Wikiversity:Vandalism|vandalism]] doesn't need to be hidden and custodians should only hide the information necessary. For example, if only the edit comment is problematic then the username and revision text should be left visible.}}
</div>
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Journalism on Wikinews
0
104379
2808953
2682320
2026-05-13T21:55:44Z
Koavf
147
new key for [[Category:Journalism]]: " " using [[Help:Gadget-HotCat|HotCat]]
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text/x-wiki
== Overview ==
[[n:Main page|''Wikinews'']] is the news-based Wikimedia Foundation sister project to Wikiversity and [[w:Main page|Wikipedia]].
[[w:User:Eloquence|Erik Möller]], the current (2010) deputy CEO of the Foundation, is generally credited with being instrumental in getting the project off the ground. With a focus on news, the project is frequently overshadowed by current events on Wikipedia - which, naturally, attracts a far larger contributor base. There are stark differences between "The Free Encyclopedia you can Write", and "The Free News Source you can Write". Encyclopedic articles are continually developing - whereas news articles are a snapshot of what is known at a point in time.
Through negotiation with Google News, project bureaucrat [[n:Brian McNeil|Brian McNeil]] successfully arranged listing of the English-language ''Wikinews'' project in Google's index-cum-aggregator; adopting the Wikimedia extension for Flagged Revisions, and technically implementing a formal peer review process which parallels that of traditional journalism to meet Google's requirements and address a perennial contributor gripe.
This, by-and-large, makes ''Wikinews'' a unique publisher of [[Citizen journalism]].
== Coursework ==
== Discussion questions ==
* What societal benefits can citizen journalism provide?
== See also ==
* [[n:Main page|''Wikinews'']]
* [[School:Journalism|Journalism]]
* [[New journalism]]
* [[Blogging]]
[[Category:Journalism| ]]
my2mitjhvxww8yhzu6dyb9oij5jajxk
2808955
2808953
2026-05-13T21:56:44Z
Koavf
147
/* See also */
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wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Overview ==
[[n:Main page|''Wikinews'']] is the news-based Wikimedia Foundation sister project to Wikiversity and [[w:Main page|Wikipedia]].
[[w:User:Eloquence|Erik Möller]], the current (2010) deputy CEO of the Foundation, is generally credited with being instrumental in getting the project off the ground. With a focus on news, the project is frequently overshadowed by current events on Wikipedia - which, naturally, attracts a far larger contributor base. There are stark differences between "The Free Encyclopedia you can Write", and "The Free News Source you can Write". Encyclopedic articles are continually developing - whereas news articles are a snapshot of what is known at a point in time.
Through negotiation with Google News, project bureaucrat [[n:Brian McNeil|Brian McNeil]] successfully arranged listing of the English-language ''Wikinews'' project in Google's index-cum-aggregator; adopting the Wikimedia extension for Flagged Revisions, and technically implementing a formal peer review process which parallels that of traditional journalism to meet Google's requirements and address a perennial contributor gripe.
This, by-and-large, makes ''Wikinews'' a unique publisher of [[Citizen journalism]].
== Coursework ==
== Discussion questions ==
* What societal benefits can citizen journalism provide?
== See also ==
* [[n:Main page|''Wikinews'']], a now-closed sister project of Wikiversity.
* [[School:Journalism|Journalism]]
* [[New journalism]]
* [[Blogging]]
[[Category:Journalism| ]]
s2m1do25cunlpdjgpq0f3hv32ak9bcq
Talk:Journalism studies and Wikinews
1
137488
2808957
1027224
2026-05-13T22:09:00Z
BigKrow
3069766
/* Updated */ new section
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text/x-wiki
==Cut and pasted from "notes" on front page==
===Wikipedia and the Death of the Expert===
[http://www.theawl.com/2011/05/wikipedia-and-the-death-of-the-expert This article] looked like it was going to lend intellectual weight to the idea that crowd sourced knowledge disembodies expertise, but instead it gave another sales pitch for Wikipedia. Still, I list it here as a resource to stimulate thought and discussion. I would like us to more honestly represent the concerns of the nay sayers, understand them and present their truth as the real yet timid challenge it is. Some of the comments give pointers to a deeper perspective.
===A Community-Based Model for the Production of Ideas===
[http://www.geof.net/research/2008/thesis/summary This MA thesis] presents a community-based model for the creation of intellectual and creative works. Such works play an important role in our society and economy. They are often understood as products of exclusive ownership (granted through mechanisms such as copyright). I show that a community-based model has proven to be at least as effective in a number of areas, and explain how it resolves a number of economic inconsistencies and problems inherent in the proprietary model. Moreover, I argue that the creative community is not only a method of production: it is also a way of living that can strengthen communities and assist in the self-development of individuals
===Preservation of tradition===
[http://www.openculture.com/2011/05/the_musalman_the_last_handwritten_newspaper_in_the_world.html The Musalman: The Last Handwritten Newspaper in the World] as a way in to considering traditions and our relationship to them. What, for example, does Musalman and Wikinews have in common?
==Some problems experienced==
It looks as if the project is on its last legs. Unlike the 2011 instance, the 2013 one has created some strong feelings against the Wikinews platform as a viable space for journalism student learning. The work of a few new reviewers in Wikinews have created significant amount of discontent in this year's cohort of students, causing the academic who is leading the project to feel that Wikinews reviewers can become too inconsistent, creating unnecessary stresses for the students. I have looked into it to date, and while most of the comments from the reviewers were to the letter of Wikinews policy and guidelines, there appeared to be a number of instances of varying standards were inadvertently being applied to different types of news stories. So far this semester, not a single student in the cohort has succeeded in getting a story through. This particular point is unsurprising, as the standards set by Wikinews policy and guidelines are very high. However, a supportive and helpful communicative framework seems lacking. Most of the problem I think relates to the design of Wikinews review. Like all the Wikimedia projects, the openness combined with hierarchies of control leaves the review process at risk of being dominated by a small group of like minded people. That group may lack the diversity in perspective or experience to check each other's work, and to be more supportive to new comers. This problem is well known across all the Wikimedia projects. In other projects like-minded groups can hold of administrator privileges, and use those to alienate, sideline and even bully other contributors or certain types of contribution. This type of behavior can be both explicit and implicit, intentional or non-intentional. It is thus so difficult to hold to account. The review process in Wikinews may well be feeding such developments, and starting a feeling of bad will in its simple implementation (red cross graphics, short sharp messages, guidelines made difficult through hypertext, little prompts to reviewers to get involved and help see a new editor across the line) and the preference of reviewers to not get involved in the development of the news story they are reviewing, may well be leaving many new comers feeling unsupported and blocked. The unfortunate result in this instance is that the UoW project will draw to a close citing difficulties with reviewers and their communications, and the findings of this paper will be updated to reflect the new experiences and outcomes. [[User:Leighblackall|Leighblackall]] ([[User talk:Leighblackall|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leighblackall|contribs]]) 05:09, 17 April 2013 (UTC)
== Updated ==
this should be updated and so should all wikinews topics on here. @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:09, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
fjt8jt6v9gw03jq7p440r402j1s8vcc
2809092
2808957
2026-05-14T05:23:41Z
Koavf
147
/* Updated */ Reply
2809092
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Cut and pasted from "notes" on front page==
===Wikipedia and the Death of the Expert===
[http://www.theawl.com/2011/05/wikipedia-and-the-death-of-the-expert This article] looked like it was going to lend intellectual weight to the idea that crowd sourced knowledge disembodies expertise, but instead it gave another sales pitch for Wikipedia. Still, I list it here as a resource to stimulate thought and discussion. I would like us to more honestly represent the concerns of the nay sayers, understand them and present their truth as the real yet timid challenge it is. Some of the comments give pointers to a deeper perspective.
===A Community-Based Model for the Production of Ideas===
[http://www.geof.net/research/2008/thesis/summary This MA thesis] presents a community-based model for the creation of intellectual and creative works. Such works play an important role in our society and economy. They are often understood as products of exclusive ownership (granted through mechanisms such as copyright). I show that a community-based model has proven to be at least as effective in a number of areas, and explain how it resolves a number of economic inconsistencies and problems inherent in the proprietary model. Moreover, I argue that the creative community is not only a method of production: it is also a way of living that can strengthen communities and assist in the self-development of individuals
===Preservation of tradition===
[http://www.openculture.com/2011/05/the_musalman_the_last_handwritten_newspaper_in_the_world.html The Musalman: The Last Handwritten Newspaper in the World] as a way in to considering traditions and our relationship to them. What, for example, does Musalman and Wikinews have in common?
==Some problems experienced==
It looks as if the project is on its last legs. Unlike the 2011 instance, the 2013 one has created some strong feelings against the Wikinews platform as a viable space for journalism student learning. The work of a few new reviewers in Wikinews have created significant amount of discontent in this year's cohort of students, causing the academic who is leading the project to feel that Wikinews reviewers can become too inconsistent, creating unnecessary stresses for the students. I have looked into it to date, and while most of the comments from the reviewers were to the letter of Wikinews policy and guidelines, there appeared to be a number of instances of varying standards were inadvertently being applied to different types of news stories. So far this semester, not a single student in the cohort has succeeded in getting a story through. This particular point is unsurprising, as the standards set by Wikinews policy and guidelines are very high. However, a supportive and helpful communicative framework seems lacking. Most of the problem I think relates to the design of Wikinews review. Like all the Wikimedia projects, the openness combined with hierarchies of control leaves the review process at risk of being dominated by a small group of like minded people. That group may lack the diversity in perspective or experience to check each other's work, and to be more supportive to new comers. This problem is well known across all the Wikimedia projects. In other projects like-minded groups can hold of administrator privileges, and use those to alienate, sideline and even bully other contributors or certain types of contribution. This type of behavior can be both explicit and implicit, intentional or non-intentional. It is thus so difficult to hold to account. The review process in Wikinews may well be feeding such developments, and starting a feeling of bad will in its simple implementation (red cross graphics, short sharp messages, guidelines made difficult through hypertext, little prompts to reviewers to get involved and help see a new editor across the line) and the preference of reviewers to not get involved in the development of the news story they are reviewing, may well be leaving many new comers feeling unsupported and blocked. The unfortunate result in this instance is that the UoW project will draw to a close citing difficulties with reviewers and their communications, and the findings of this paper will be updated to reflect the new experiences and outcomes. [[User:Leighblackall|Leighblackall]] ([[User talk:Leighblackall|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Leighblackall|contribs]]) 05:09, 17 April 2013 (UTC)
== Updated ==
this should be updated and so should all wikinews topics on here. @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 22:09, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:I agree in principle and think we should propose this at the Colloquium. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:23, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
de0tgib812lvdgd7xpq5gnogyy71go5
Understanding Arithmetic Circuits
0
139384
2808881
2808517
2026-05-13T13:51:40Z
Young1lim
21186
/* Adder */
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wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Adder ==
* Binary Adder Architecture Exploration ( [[Media:Adder.20131113.pdf|pdf]] )
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Adder type !! Overview !! Analysis !! VHDL Level Design !! CMOS Level Design
|-
| '''1. Ripple Carry Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1A.RCA.20250522.pdf|A]]||
|| [[Media:Adder.rca.20140313.pdf|pdf]]
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1D.RCA.CMOS.20211108.pdf|pdf]]
|-
| '''2. Carry Lookahead Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.CLA.20260109.pdf|org]], [[Media:VLSI.Arith.2A.CLA.20260513.pdf|A]], [[Media:VLSI.Arith.2B.CLA.20260513.pdf|B]] ||
|| [[Media:Adder.cla.20140313.pdf|pdf]]||
|-
| '''3. Carry Save Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.CSave.20151209.pdf|A]]||
|| ||
|-
|| '''4. Carry Select Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.CSelA.20191002.pdf|A]]||
|| ||
|-
|| '''5. Carry Skip Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.5A.CSkip.20250405.pdf|A]]||
||
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.5D.CSkip.CMOS.20211108.pdf|pdf]]
|-
|| '''6. Carry Chain Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.6A.CCA.20211109.pdf|A]]||
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.6C.CCA.VHDL.20211109.pdf|pdf]], [[Media:Adder.cca.20140313.pdf|pdf]]
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.6D.CCA.CMOS.20211109.pdf|pdf]]
|-
|| '''7. Kogge-Stone Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.KSA.20140315.pdf|A]]||
|| [[Media:Adder.ksa.20140409.pdf|pdf]]||
|-
|| '''8. Prefix Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.PFA.20140314.pdf|A]]||
|| ||
|-
|| '''9.1 Variable Block Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1A.VBA.20221110.pdf|A]], [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1B.VBA.20230911.pdf|B]], [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1C.VBA.20240622.pdf|C]], [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1C.VBA.20250218.pdf|D]]||
|| ||
|-
|| '''9.2 Multi-Level Variable Block Adder'''
|| [[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.VBA-Multi.20221031.pdf|A]]||
|| ||
|}
</br>
=== Adder Architectures Suitable for FPGA ===
* FPGA Carry-Chain Adder ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.FPGA-CCA.20210421.pdf|pdf]])
* FPGA Carry Select Adder ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.B.FPGA-CarrySelect.20210522.pdf|pdf]])
* FPGA Variable Block Adder ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.C.FPGA-VariableBlock.20220125.pdf|pdf]])
* FPGA Carry Lookahead Adder ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.D.FPGA-CLookahead.20210304.pdf|pdf]])
* Carry-Skip Adder
</br>
== Barrel Shifter ==
* Barrel Shifter Architecture Exploration ([[Media:Bshift.20131105.pdf|bshfit.vhdl]], [[Media:Bshift.makefile.20131109.pdf|bshfit.makefile]])
</br>
'''Mux Based Barrel Shifter'''
* Analysis ([[Media:Arith.BShfiter.20151207.pdf|pdf]])
* Implementation
</br>
== Multiplier ==
=== Array Multipliers ===
* Analysis ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.Mult.20151209.pdf|pdf]])
</br>
=== Tree Mulltipliers ===
* Lattice Multiplication ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.LatticeMult.20170204.pdf|pdf]])
* Wallace Tree ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.WallaceTree.20170204.pdf|pdf]])
* Dadda Tree ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.DaddaTree.20170701.pdf|pdf]])
</br>
=== Booth Multipliers ===
* [[Media:RNS4.BoothEncode.20161005.pdf|Booth Encoding Note]]
* Booth Multiplier Note ([[Media:BoothMult.20160929.pdf|H1.pdf]])
</br>
== Divider ==
* Binary Divider ([[Media:VLSI.Arith.1.A.Divider.20131217.pdf|pdf]])</br>
</br>
</br>
go to [ [[Electrical_%26_Computer_Engineering_Studies]] ]
[[Category:Digital Circuit Design]]
[[Category:FPGA]]
o6da04vbpqq45obv5o2jpioksq3shy4
Computer Skills/Fundamentals/Mouse
0
140567
2808937
2460176
2026-05-13T20:49:48Z
SunKissedMocha
3067192
Made it easier for users to learn how to use their mouse, also included touchpad information.
2808937
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}/Sidebar}}__TOC__
A '''computer mouse''' (plural '''mice''') is a hand-held pointing device that allows users to control a pointer (called a cursor) on a display, which allows users to point, select, and move objects.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_mouse|title=Computer mouse|website=Wikipedia}}</ref> On laptops, an alternative to the mouse called a '''touchpad''' or '''trackpad''' can be used to control the cursor.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touchpad|title=Touchpad|website=Wikipedia}}</ref>
== Multimedia ==
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3s_OYgtl8g How to Use the Mouse]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ij8VP94uyqs&t=55s Using a trackpad for beginners]
== Activities ==
* Complete the [[Computer Skills/Fundamentals/Mouse/Test|mouse test]].
* To get more experience using your mouse, try to click all of the targets on [https://humanbenchmark.com/tests/aim Human Benchmark's Aim Trainer].
== See Also ==
* [[Introduction_to_Computers/Input_Devices |Input Devices]]
* [[Wikipedia: Mouse (computing)]]
* [[Wikipedia: Touchpad]]
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{subpage navbar}}
[[Category:Computer Skills]]
[[Category:Completed resources]]
r8wo76qhyjuwfu3w7bbcq789pciocc7
MediaWiki talk:Blockedtext
9
152803
2809006
2796658
2026-05-14T00:55:04Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
/* Improve Blocked text message */ Not done. (using [[wikt:MediaWiki:Gadget-AjaxEdit.js|AjaxEdit]])
2809006
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== request for full change ==
<nowiki>{{editprotected}}</nowiki>
can someone change the blocked text like this?
{| id="mw-blocked-text" style="border:2px solid #000; width:100%; margin:0 auto 6px auto;"
|
<div style="text-align:right;">[https:{{FULLURL:Special:Userlogin}} </div>
<div style="width:100%; margin:auto; text-align:center;"><div style="font-size:140%;">'''''You are currently unable to edit Wikiversity.'''''</div>
<u>'''You are not blocked from reading pages, only from changing or creating them.'''</u>
</div>
<div style="margin:auto; width:70%;">
<div style="text-align:justify;">
Editing from $7 has been '''[[Wikiversity:BLOCK|blocked]]''' (disabled) by <code>$1</code> for the following reason(s):<br clear="all">
<div style="margin:1em; padding:5px; border:3px #666 double;">$2</div>
This block has been set to expire on: '''$6'''.
Even if blocked, you will ''usually'' still be able to edit your [[Special:Mytalk|user talk page]] and email other editors and administrators.
====Information for blocked users====
You can [[Special:EmailUser/$4|email $4]] or another [[Wikiversity:Administrators|administrator]] ([[Special:ListAdmins|list]]) to contest the block.
You cannot use the ''email this user'' feature unless a valid email address is specified in your
[[Special:Preferences|account preferences]], has been confirmed, and you are not disallowed from using it while blocked.
Your current IP address is $3 and the block ID is #$5. Please include this in any queries. Blocked users can edit [[Special:MyTalk|their own user talk page]], unless specifically disallowed from doing so (if you are not logged in as a registered user, this will be the talk page for your IP address). You can add <kbd>{{unblock|''your reason for requesting an unblock here''}}</kbd> to [[Special:MyTalk|your user talk page]] to request unblocking.
If the block reason seems unrelated to you, it is possible you were affected by a software feature known as the [[w:Wikipedia:Autoblock|autoblock]]. In that case, contact an administrator and they will do their best to remove the autoblock. Please note that, for technical reasons, removing the autoblock is not always possible. In such cases, you may need to wait 24 hours for the autoblock to expire.
</div></div>
|}
[[Special:Contributions/2602:304:AF53:3E99:5DE9:AD5F:FD08:DE2F|2602:304:AF53:3E99:5DE9:AD5F:FD08:DE2F]] ([[User talk:2602:304:AF53:3E99:5DE9:AD5F:FD08:DE2F|discuss]]) 00:54, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
:It lacks clarity. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-29693-86|~2025-29693-86]] ([[User talk:~2025-29693-86|talk]]) 23:25, 22 October 2025 (UTC)
::This message is used as simple text, "You are currently unable to edit" is not plausible. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-29693-86|~2025-29693-86]] ([[User talk:~2025-29693-86|talk]]) 23:26, 22 October 2025 (UTC)
===Comment===
This message includes parameters not found in the standard message. I do not know if these parameters will properly function here. I am not a custodian and cannot test this message. However, the request is proper and may remain here until reviewed and accepted or rejected. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 16:21, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
*The suggested message does not appear to be bad, but I prefer the detailed instructions for blocked users to be on a separate page, as is done with the Wikipedia block message, [[w:MediaWiki:Blockedtext]]. There would be no harm in adding the additional display parameters, such as block expiration. Whether those parameters all function on wikiversity is obscure to me. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 16:34, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
**The one on WP is probably simpler (hadn't looked at this interface on either project in a long time). Does WV have a page with instructions for the blocked user somewhere? --[[User:SB_Johnny|{{font|color=green|'''SB_Johnny'''}}]] <sup>[[User_talk:SB_Johnny|{{font|color=green|talk}}]]</sup> 23:32, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
***Note: OP is a cross-wiki long term abuser. Feel free to discuss this though. --[[User:Glaisher|Glaisher]] ([[User talk:Glaisher|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Glaisher|contribs]]) 07:00, 3 December 2013 (UTC)
::I removed the control words that were placed here.
::I agree with SBJ, we need a page that will help blocked users.
::I wrote an essay/guideline inspired by this. [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy/Guidance if blocked]] is a start (it is not complete). This could also be an essay page within [[Wiki studies]], currently called [[Wiki science]] except most of it isn't Science. This is Art. A WV space page should be linked from the block message, and it can then be maintained by ordinary users, and link to resources like the essay. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 21:21, 9 March 2015 (UTC)
*'''Edit under protection not done.''' If a registered editor wants to renew this, that can be done. I no-wiki'd the request template. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 18:09, 3 August 2015 (UTC)
== Improved Blockedtext ==
Can you change the Blockedtext to this:
<table style="background-color: rgb(255, 155, 155);{{text color default}}; width: 100%; padding: 10pt; border: 1px solid red;">
<tr>
<td>
[[File:Stop hand.svg]]
</td><td>
<b style="font-size: 18pt">You are currently blocked from editing Wikiversity.</b><br/>
<b style="font-size: 14pt">You can still read Wikiversity, but not edit, create, or move pages.</b><br/>
$7 has been blocked from editing Wikiversity by [[User:$1|$1]] until $6 for the following reason(s):
<div style="background-color: rgb(255, 205, 205);{{text color default}}; border: 1px solid red;">$2</div>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td colspan="2">
<b style="font-size: 14pt">How can I appeal?</b><br/>
* Add {{[[Template:Unblock|unblock]]}} to [[Special:MyTalk|your talk page]].
* [[Special:EmailUser/$1|Email $1]]
<b style="font-size: 14pt">Helpful advice</b><br/>
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
</td>
</tr>
</table>
[[User:Faster than Thunder|Faster than Thunder]] ([[User talk:Faster than Thunder|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Faster than Thunder|contribs]]) 02:13, 25 November 2021 (UTC)
:This message shouldn't be changed. Your change contains the old icon. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-29645-98|~2025-29645-98]] ([[User talk:~2025-29645-98|talk]]) 20:27, 21 October 2025 (UTC)
::{{Not done}} for now. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-34358-36|~2025-34358-36]] ([[User talk:~2025-34358-36|talk]]) 17:53, 17 November 2025 (UTC)
== Improve Blocked text message ==
{{tl|editprotected}}
"Your account or IP address has been blocked" is more specific, while "Your user name or IP address has been blocked" is less specific. Instead of a "user name or IP address block", we should consider an "account block" and an "IP address block".
What about:
<big>'''Your account or IP address has been [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy|blocked]].'''</big>
The block was made by $1. The reason given is ''$2''.
You can contact $1 or another [[Wikiversity:Support staff|custodian]] to discuss the block. You can use the 'email this user' feature (in the left-hand sidebar of a custodian's user page) provided a valid email address is specified in ''your'' [[Special:Preferences|account preferences]]. Your current IP address is $3. Please include this in any queries. Blocked users can usually edit their own user discussion page. If you are not logged in as a registered user, use the user discussion page for your IP address: [[User talk:$3|here]]. You can add the template {{tl|Unblock}} to your user discussion page in order to request unblocking.
[[Special:Contributions/~2025-29978-26|~2025-29978-26]] ([[User talk:~2025-29978-26|talk]]) 02:34, 25 October 2025 (UTC)
:More specific than "Your username or IP address has been blocked". [[Special:Contributions/~2025-30001-37|~2025-30001-37]] ([[User talk:~2025-30001-37|talk]]) 13:13, 25 October 2025 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:35, 17 November 2025 (UTC)
<nowiki>{{editprotected}}</nowiki> Can you change the Blockedtext message from simple text to a message box?
The result:
<templatestyles src="Wikiversity:Main Page/Welcome/styles.css"/>
<div class="mp-welcome-outermost">
<div class="mp-welcome-outer">
<div class="mp-welcome-text-outer">
<div style="text-align:center;><span style="font-size:120%">'''Your account or IP address has been blocked.'''</span></div>
$7, You were blocked by $1 until $6 for the following reason(s): <em>$2</em>
----
* Start of block: $8
* Expiry of block: $6
* Block ID: #$5
* Current IP address: $3
----
'''What can I do now?'''
* '''Contacting an admin''': You can contact $1 or another custodian to discuss the block. You can use the 'email this user' feature (in the left-hand sidebar of a custodian's user page) provided a valid email address is specified in your [[Special:Preferences |account preferences]].
* '''Please include this in any queries''': Blocked users can usually edit their own user discussion page. If you are not logged in as a registered user, use the user discussion page for your IP address: [[User talk:$3|here]].
* '''Request unblocking''': You can add the template {{tl|Unblock}} to your user discussion page in order to request unblocking.
</div></div></div>
[[Special:Contributions/~2025-34358-36|~2025-34358-36]] ([[User talk:~2025-34358-36|talk]]) 00:53, 18 November 2025 (UTC)
:{{not done}}, user globally locked for sockpuppetry by an LTA. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
ed4zo4mk424huhaxs0mvgd58twituro
2809007
2809006
2026-05-14T00:55:39Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
Removing whitespace.
2809007
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== request for full change ==
<nowiki>{{editprotected}}</nowiki>
can someone change the blocked text like this?
{| id="mw-blocked-text" style="border:2px solid #000; width:100%; margin:0 auto 6px auto;"
|
<div style="text-align:right;">[https:{{FULLURL:Special:Userlogin}} </div>
<div style="width:100%; margin:auto; text-align:center;"><div style="font-size:140%;">'''''You are currently unable to edit Wikiversity.'''''</div>
<u>'''You are not blocked from reading pages, only from changing or creating them.'''</u>
</div>
<div style="margin:auto; width:70%;">
<div style="text-align:justify;">
Editing from $7 has been '''[[Wikiversity:BLOCK|blocked]]''' (disabled) by <code>$1</code> for the following reason(s):<br clear="all">
<div style="margin:1em; padding:5px; border:3px #666 double;">$2</div>
This block has been set to expire on: '''$6'''.
Even if blocked, you will ''usually'' still be able to edit your [[Special:Mytalk|user talk page]] and email other editors and administrators.
====Information for blocked users====
You can [[Special:EmailUser/$4|email $4]] or another [[Wikiversity:Administrators|administrator]] ([[Special:ListAdmins|list]]) to contest the block.
You cannot use the ''email this user'' feature unless a valid email address is specified in your
[[Special:Preferences|account preferences]], has been confirmed, and you are not disallowed from using it while blocked.
Your current IP address is $3 and the block ID is #$5. Please include this in any queries. Blocked users can edit [[Special:MyTalk|their own user talk page]], unless specifically disallowed from doing so (if you are not logged in as a registered user, this will be the talk page for your IP address). You can add <kbd>{{unblock|''your reason for requesting an unblock here''}}</kbd> to [[Special:MyTalk|your user talk page]] to request unblocking.
If the block reason seems unrelated to you, it is possible you were affected by a software feature known as the [[w:Wikipedia:Autoblock|autoblock]]. In that case, contact an administrator and they will do their best to remove the autoblock. Please note that, for technical reasons, removing the autoblock is not always possible. In such cases, you may need to wait 24 hours for the autoblock to expire.
</div></div>
|}
[[Special:Contributions/2602:304:AF53:3E99:5DE9:AD5F:FD08:DE2F|2602:304:AF53:3E99:5DE9:AD5F:FD08:DE2F]] ([[User talk:2602:304:AF53:3E99:5DE9:AD5F:FD08:DE2F|discuss]]) 00:54, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
:It lacks clarity. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-29693-86|~2025-29693-86]] ([[User talk:~2025-29693-86|talk]]) 23:25, 22 October 2025 (UTC)
::This message is used as simple text, "You are currently unable to edit" is not plausible. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-29693-86|~2025-29693-86]] ([[User talk:~2025-29693-86|talk]]) 23:26, 22 October 2025 (UTC)
===Comment===
This message includes parameters not found in the standard message. I do not know if these parameters will properly function here. I am not a custodian and cannot test this message. However, the request is proper and may remain here until reviewed and accepted or rejected. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 16:21, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
*The suggested message does not appear to be bad, but I prefer the detailed instructions for blocked users to be on a separate page, as is done with the Wikipedia block message, [[w:MediaWiki:Blockedtext]]. There would be no harm in adding the additional display parameters, such as block expiration. Whether those parameters all function on wikiversity is obscure to me. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 16:34, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
**The one on WP is probably simpler (hadn't looked at this interface on either project in a long time). Does WV have a page with instructions for the blocked user somewhere? --[[User:SB_Johnny|{{font|color=green|'''SB_Johnny'''}}]] <sup>[[User_talk:SB_Johnny|{{font|color=green|talk}}]]</sup> 23:32, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
***Note: OP is a cross-wiki long term abuser. Feel free to discuss this though. --[[User:Glaisher|Glaisher]] ([[User talk:Glaisher|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Glaisher|contribs]]) 07:00, 3 December 2013 (UTC)
::I removed the control words that were placed here.
::I agree with SBJ, we need a page that will help blocked users.
::I wrote an essay/guideline inspired by this. [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy/Guidance if blocked]] is a start (it is not complete). This could also be an essay page within [[Wiki studies]], currently called [[Wiki science]] except most of it isn't Science. This is Art. A WV space page should be linked from the block message, and it can then be maintained by ordinary users, and link to resources like the essay. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 21:21, 9 March 2015 (UTC)
*'''Edit under protection not done.''' If a registered editor wants to renew this, that can be done. I no-wiki'd the request template. --[[User:Abd|Abd]] ([[User talk:Abd|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Abd|contribs]]) 18:09, 3 August 2015 (UTC)
== Improved Blockedtext ==
Can you change the Blockedtext to this:
<table style="background-color: rgb(255, 155, 155);{{text color default}}; width: 100%; padding: 10pt; border: 1px solid red;">
<tr>
<td>
[[File:Stop hand.svg]]
</td><td>
<b style="font-size: 18pt">You are currently blocked from editing Wikiversity.</b><br/>
<b style="font-size: 14pt">You can still read Wikiversity, but not edit, create, or move pages.</b><br/>
$7 has been blocked from editing Wikiversity by [[User:$1|$1]] until $6 for the following reason(s):
<div style="background-color: rgb(255, 205, 205);{{text color default}}; border: 1px solid red;">$2</div>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td colspan="2">
<b style="font-size: 14pt">How can I appeal?</b><br/>
* Add {{[[Template:Unblock|unblock]]}} to [[Special:MyTalk|your talk page]].
* [[Special:EmailUser/$1|Email $1]]
<b style="font-size: 14pt">Helpful advice</b><br/>
* [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy]]
</td>
</tr>
</table>
[[User:Faster than Thunder|Faster than Thunder]] ([[User talk:Faster than Thunder|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Faster than Thunder|contribs]]) 02:13, 25 November 2021 (UTC)
:This message shouldn't be changed. Your change contains the old icon. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-29645-98|~2025-29645-98]] ([[User talk:~2025-29645-98|talk]]) 20:27, 21 October 2025 (UTC)
::{{Not done}} for now. [[Special:Contributions/~2025-34358-36|~2025-34358-36]] ([[User talk:~2025-34358-36|talk]]) 17:53, 17 November 2025 (UTC)
== Improve Blocked text message ==
{{tl|editprotected}}
"Your account or IP address has been blocked" is more specific, while "Your user name or IP address has been blocked" is less specific. Instead of a "user name or IP address block", we should consider an "account block" and an "IP address block".
What about:
<big>'''Your account or IP address has been [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy|blocked]].'''</big>
The block was made by $1. The reason given is ''$2''.
You can contact $1 or another [[Wikiversity:Support staff|custodian]] to discuss the block. You can use the 'email this user' feature (in the left-hand sidebar of a custodian's user page) provided a valid email address is specified in ''your'' [[Special:Preferences|account preferences]]. Your current IP address is $3. Please include this in any queries. Blocked users can usually edit their own user discussion page. If you are not logged in as a registered user, use the user discussion page for your IP address: [[User talk:$3|here]]. You can add the template {{tl|Unblock}} to your user discussion page in order to request unblocking.
[[Special:Contributions/~2025-29978-26|~2025-29978-26]] ([[User talk:~2025-29978-26|talk]]) 02:34, 25 October 2025 (UTC)
:More specific than "Your username or IP address has been blocked". [[Special:Contributions/~2025-30001-37|~2025-30001-37]] ([[User talk:~2025-30001-37|talk]]) 13:13, 25 October 2025 (UTC)
:{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:35, 17 November 2025 (UTC)
<nowiki>{{editprotected}}</nowiki> Can you change the Blockedtext message from simple text to a message box?
The result:
<templatestyles src="Wikiversity:Main Page/Welcome/styles.css"/>
<div class="mp-welcome-outermost">
<div class="mp-welcome-outer">
<div class="mp-welcome-text-outer">
<div style="text-align:center;><span style="font-size:120%">'''Your account or IP address has been blocked.'''</span></div>
$7, You were blocked by $1 until $6 for the following reason(s): <em>$2</em>
----
* Start of block: $8
* Expiry of block: $6
* Block ID: #$5
* Current IP address: $3
----
'''What can I do now?'''
* '''Contacting an admin''': You can contact $1 or another custodian to discuss the block. You can use the 'email this user' feature (in the left-hand sidebar of a custodian's user page) provided a valid email address is specified in your [[Special:Preferences |account preferences]].
* '''Please include this in any queries''': Blocked users can usually edit their own user discussion page. If you are not logged in as a registered user, use the user discussion page for your IP address: [[User talk:$3|here]].
* '''Request unblocking''': You can add the template {{tl|Unblock}} to your user discussion page in order to request unblocking.
</div></div></div>
[[Special:Contributions/~2025-34358-36|~2025-34358-36]] ([[User talk:~2025-34358-36|talk]]) 00:53, 18 November 2025 (UTC)
:{{not done}}, user globally locked for sockpuppetry by an LTA. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 00:55, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
m3hekb3v258811xz24f3lpy3u8wndod
Computer Skills
0
156132
2808943
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{{:{{PAGENAME}}/Sidebar}}
Computer skills are essential in order to utilize computers and related technology efficiently.<ref>[[Wikipedia:Computer literacy]]</ref> This course will help you learn basic computer skills, including typing and using a mouse. After you've mastered the basics, this course will help you learn about Internet and email, computers, word processing, multimedia, and spreadsheets.
== Levels ==
* {{100Percent}} [[/Fundamentals/ | Level 1 - Fundamental Skills (Typing, Mouse)]]
* {{100Percent}} [[/Basic/ | Level 2 - Basic Computing and Applications]]
* {{100Percent}} [[/Intermediate/ | Level 3 - Intermediate Computing and Applications]]
* {{25Percent}} [[/Advanced/ | Level 4 - Advanced Computing and Applications]]
* {{25Percent}} [[/Proficient/ | Level 5 - Proficient Computing, Applications, and Programming]]
== Preparation ==
This is an introductory course. No previous computer experience is necessary. Just follow the lesson levels below or select a specific skill area.
== Skills ==
* [[/Fundamentals/Typing|Typing]]
* [[/Fundamentals/Mouse|Mouse]]
* [[/Basic/Internet|Internet]]
* [[/Basic/Email|Email]]
* [[/Basic/Hardware|Hardware]]
* [[/Basic/Software Concepts|Operating Systems]]
* [[/Basic/Word Processing|Word Processing]]
* [[/Basic/Presentations|Presentations]]
* [[/Basic/Graphics|Graphics]]
* [[/Basic/Multimedia|Multimedia]]
* [[/Basic/Spreadsheets|Spreadsheets]]
* [[/Intermediate/Databases|Databases]]
* [[/Proficient/Programming|Programming]]
== See Also ==
* [[IC3|Internet and Computing Core Certification (IC3)]]
* [[Introduction to Computers]]
* [[Wikiversity computer skills]]
* [[Computer literacy]]
* [[Wikipedia: Computer literacy]]
* [https://www.learnfree.org/ LearnFree.org]
* [http://www.eaa.unsw.edu.au/forms/pdf/icas/subjects/computer-skills-framework.pdf University of New South Wales: Computer Skills Assessment Framework]
* [https://courses.lumenlearning.com/wmopen-compapp Lumen Learning: Computer Applications for Managers]
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Technology courses]]
{{Hide|{{Primary}}}}
{{Hide|{{Secondary}}}}
{{Hide|{{50%done|theme=14}}}}
{{CourseCat}}
[[Category:Word processing]]
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Computer Skills/Basic/Hardware
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'''Computer hardware''' includes the physical parts of a computer, such as the central processing unit (CPU), random-access memory (RAM), motherboard, computer data storage, graphics card, sound card, and computer case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_hardware|title=Computer hardware|website=Wikipedia}}</ref>
== Objectives and Skills ==
Objectives and skills for basic hardware include:<ref>[http://www.eaa.unsw.edu.au/forms/pdf/icas/subjects/computer-skills-framework.pdf University of New South Wales: Computer Skills Assessment Framework]</ref>
* Identify component parts: cables, etc
== Multimedia ==
# [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLgTnkw558w YouTube: Computer Basics - Basic Parts of a Computer]
== Activities ==
# Complete the tutorial [https://www.learnfree.org/series/computer-basics Getting to Know Computers]. Make sure to complete the quiz at the end of the course.
# Learn more about [https://red-dot-geek.com/basic-computer-parts-functions/ Basic Computer Components]. A Computers internal architectural design comes in different types and sizes, but the basic structure remains same of all computer systems.
#Learn about the [https://artoftesting.com/block-diagram-of-computer Block Diagram of Computer]. A computer can perform major computer operations or functions irrespective of their size and make.
#Learn about other [https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/computer-science-fundamentals/types-of-computers/ Types of Computers]. There are several other kinds of computers that may interest you.
== See Also ==
* [[../../Intermediate/Hardware]]
* [[../../Advanced/Hardware]]
* [[../../Proficient/Hardware]]
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{subpage navbar}}
{{CourseCat}}
[[Category:Computer Skills]]
[[Category:Computer hardware]]
[[Category:Completed resources]]
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{{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}/Sidebar}}
Computer hardware covered in this section includes the computer case, the display, the keyboard, mouse, computer parts, cables, and connectors.
== Objectives and Skills ==
Objectives and skills for basic hardware include:<ref>[http://www.eaa.unsw.edu.au/forms/pdf/icas/subjects/computer-skills-framework.pdf University of New South Wales: Computer Skills Assessment Framework]</ref>
* Identify component parts: cables, etc
== Multimedia ==
# [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLgTnkw558w YouTube: Computer Basics - Basic Parts of a Computer]
== Activities ==
# Complete the tutorial [https://www.learnfree.org/series/computer-basics Getting to Know Computers]. Make sure to complete the quiz at the end of the course.
# Learn more about [https://red-dot-geek.com/basic-computer-parts-functions/ Basic Computer Components]. A Computers internal architectural design comes in different types and sizes, but the basic structure remains same of all computer systems.
#Learn about the [https://artoftesting.com/block-diagram-of-computer Block Diagram of Computer]. A computer can perform major computer operations or functions irrespective of their size and make.
#Learn about other [https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/computer-science-fundamentals/types-of-computers/ Types of Computers]. There are several other kinds of computers that may interest you.
== See Also ==
* [[../../Intermediate/Hardware]]
* [[../../Advanced/Hardware]]
* [[../../Proficient/Hardware]]
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{subpage navbar}}
{{CourseCat}}
[[Category:Computer Skills]]
[[Category:Computer hardware]]
[[Category:Completed resources]]
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Computer Skills/Basic/Software Concepts
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Basic software concepts include operating systems and applications.
== Objectives and Skills ==
Objectives and skills for basic software concepts include:<ref>[http://www.eaa.unsw.edu.au/forms/pdf/icas/subjects/computer-skills-framework.pdf University of New South Wales: Computer Skills Assessment Framework]</ref>
* Distinguish what is software / hardware
* Understand menu bars; etc
* Understand basic terminology: file; application
* Understand purpose of backup
== Multimedia ==
# [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gMOYZoMtEs YouTube: Computer Basics: Understanding Applications]
== Activities ==
# Complete the tutorial [https://www.learnfree.org/series/basic-computer-skills LearnFree.org Basic Computer Skills]. This tutorial will teach you how to set up, use, and customize software, while reviewing previously learned concepts.
# Learn how to [https://www.pcmag.com/explainers/your-future-self-will-thank-you-beginners-guide-to-backing-up-your-pc Back Up Your Files]. Create a cloud backup or a physical backup of your important files.
:
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{subpage navbar}}
{{CourseCat}}
[[Category:Computer Skills]]
[[Category:Software]]
[[Category:Completed resources]]
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Computer Skills/Basic/Email
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Email fundamentals include sending, receiving and replying to email.
== Objectives and Skills ==
Objectives and skills for simple formatting include:<ref>[http://www.eaa.unsw.edu.au/forms/pdf/icas/subjects/computer-skills-framework.pdf University of New South Wales: Computer Skills Assessment Framework]</ref>
* Send/receive/reply to email
== Multimedia ==
# [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmKLfvNILNc How To Send A Email In Gmail - Full Guide]
# [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AH0BGLfQ9SM Gmail: Responding to Email with Gmail]
== Activities ==
# Complete the tutorial [https://www.learnfree.org/series/gmail LearnFree: Gmail].
# If you don't already have an email account, sign up for a Google Gmail, Microsoft Outlook, or Yahoo! Mail account.
# Try using your email account to send an email message.
# Reply to an email message you receive from someone else.
# Review the [[Email Checklist]] to learn more about email best practices.
== See Also ==
* [[../../Intermediate/Email]]
* [[../../Advanced/Email]]
* [[../../Proficient/Email]]
* [[Internet Fundamentals/Email]]
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{subpage navbar}}
{{CourseCat}}
[[Category:Computer Skills]]
[[Category:Email]]
[[Category:Completed resources]]
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Complex analysis in plain view
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Young1lim
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/* Geometric Series Examples */
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Many of the functions that arise naturally in mathematics and real world applications can be extended to and regarded as complex functions, meaning the input, as well as the output, can be complex numbers <math>x+iy</math>, where <math>i=\sqrt{-1}</math>, in such a way that it is a more natural object to study. '''Complex analysis''', which used to be known as '''function theory''' or '''theory of functions of a single complex variable''', is a sub-field of analysis that studies such functions (more specifically, '''holomorphic''' functions) on the complex plane, or part (domain) or extension (Riemann surface) thereof. It notably has great importance in number theory, e.g. the [[Riemann zeta function]] (for the distribution of primes) and other <math>L</math>-functions, modular forms, elliptic functions, etc. <blockquote>The shortest path between two truths in the real domain passes through the complex domain. — [[wikipedia:Jacques_Hadamard|Jacques Hadamard]]</blockquote>In a certain sense, the essence of complex functions is captured by the principle of [[analytic continuation]].{{mathematics}}
==''' Complex Functions '''==
* Complex Functions ([[Media:CAnal.1.A.CFunction.20140222.Basic.pdf|1.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.1.B.CFunction.20140111.Octave.pdf|1.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.1.C.CFunction.20140111.Extend.pdf|1.C.pdf]])
* Complex Exponential and Logarithm ([[Media:CAnal.5.A.CLog.20131017.pdf|5.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.5.A.Octave.pdf|5.B.pdf]])
* Complex Trigonometric and Hyperbolic ([[Media:CAnal.7.A.CTrigHyper..pdf|7.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.7.A.Octave..pdf|7.B.pdf]])
'''Complex Function Note'''
: 1. Exp and Log Function Note ([[Media:ComplexExp.29160721.pdf|H1.pdf]])
: 2. Trig and TrigH Function Note ([[Media:CAnal.Trig-H.29160901.pdf|H1.pdf]])
: 3. Inverse Trig and TrigH Functions Note ([[Media:CAnal.Hyper.29160829.pdf|H1.pdf]])
==''' Complex Integrals '''==
* Complex Integrals ([[Media:CAnal.2.A.CIntegral.20140224.Basic.pdf|2.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.2.B.CIntegral.20140117.Octave.pdf|2.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.2.C.CIntegral.20140117.Extend.pdf|2.C.pdf]])
==''' Complex Series '''==
* Complex Series ([[Media:CPX.Series.20150226.2.Basic.pdf|3.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.3.B.CSeries.20140121.Octave.pdf|3.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.3.C.CSeries.20140303.Extend.pdf|3.C.pdf]])
==''' Residue Integrals '''==
* Residue Integrals ([[Media:CAnal.4.A.Residue.20140227.Basic.pdf|4.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.4.B.pdf|4.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.4.C.Residue.20140423.Extend.pdf|4.C.pdf]])
==='''Residue Integrals Note'''===
* Laurent Series with the Residue Theorem Note ([[Media:Laurent.1.Residue.20170713.pdf|H1.pdf]])
* Laurent Series with Applications Note ([[Media:Laurent.2.Applications.20170327.pdf|H1.pdf]])
* Laurent Series and the z-Transform Note ([[Media:Laurent.3.z-Trans.20170831.pdf|H1.pdf]])
* Laurent Series as a Geometric Series Note ([[Media:Laurent.4.GSeries.20170802.pdf|H1.pdf]])
=== Laurent Series and the z-Transform Example Note ===
* Overview ([[Media:Laurent.4.z-Example.20170926.pdf|H1.pdf]])
====Geometric Series Examples====
* Causality ([[Media:Laurent.5.Causality.1.A.20191026n.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Causality.1.B.20191026.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Time Shift ([[Media:Laurent.5.TimeShift.2.A.20191028.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.TimeShift.2.B.20191029.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Reciprocity ([[Media:Laurent.5.Reciprocity.3A.20191030.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Reciprocity.3B.20191031.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Combinations ([[Media:Laurent.5.Combination.4A.20200702.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Combination.4B.20201002.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Properties ([[Media:Laurent.5.Property.5A.20220105.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Property.5B.20220126.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Permutations ([[Media:Laurent.6.Permutation.6A.20230711.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Permutation.6B.20251225.pdf|B.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Permutation.6C.20260512.pdf|C.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Permutation.6C.20240528.pdf|D.pdf]])
* Applications ([[Media:Laurent.5.Application.6B.20220723.pdf|A.pdf]])
* Double Pole Case
:- Examples ([[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleEx.7A.20220722.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleEx.7B.20220720.pdf|B.pdf]])
:- Properties ([[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleProp.5A.20190226.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleProp.5B.20190228.pdf|B.pdf]])
====The Case Examples====
* Example Overview : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.0.A.20171208.pdf|0A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.6.CaseExample.0.B.20180205.pdf|0B.pdf]])
* Example Case 1 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.1.A.20171107.pdf|1A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.1.B.20171227.pdf|1B.pdf]])
* Example Case 2 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.2.A.20171107.pdf|2A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.2.B.20171227.pdf|2B.pdf]])
* Example Case 3 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.3.A.20171017.pdf|3A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.3.B.20171226.pdf|3B.pdf]])
* Example Case 4 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.4.A.20171017.pdf|4A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.4.B.20171228.pdf|4B.pdf]])
* Example Summary : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.5.A.20171212.pdf|5A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.5.B.20171230.pdf|5B.pdf]])
==''' Conformal Mapping '''==
* Conformal Mapping ([[Media:CAnal.6.A.Conformal.20131224.pdf|6.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.6.A.Octave..pdf|6.B.pdf]])
go to [ [[Electrical_%26_Computer_Engineering_Studies]] ]
[[Category:Complex analysis]]
i0ih6qvkiuo2o1r3wuz7pee4m4okj53
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Many of the functions that arise naturally in mathematics and real world applications can be extended to and regarded as complex functions, meaning the input, as well as the output, can be complex numbers <math>x+iy</math>, where <math>i=\sqrt{-1}</math>, in such a way that it is a more natural object to study. '''Complex analysis''', which used to be known as '''function theory''' or '''theory of functions of a single complex variable''', is a sub-field of analysis that studies such functions (more specifically, '''holomorphic''' functions) on the complex plane, or part (domain) or extension (Riemann surface) thereof. It notably has great importance in number theory, e.g. the [[Riemann zeta function]] (for the distribution of primes) and other <math>L</math>-functions, modular forms, elliptic functions, etc. <blockquote>The shortest path between two truths in the real domain passes through the complex domain. — [[wikipedia:Jacques_Hadamard|Jacques Hadamard]]</blockquote>In a certain sense, the essence of complex functions is captured by the principle of [[analytic continuation]].{{mathematics}}
==''' Complex Functions '''==
* Complex Functions ([[Media:CAnal.1.A.CFunction.20140222.Basic.pdf|1.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.1.B.CFunction.20140111.Octave.pdf|1.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.1.C.CFunction.20140111.Extend.pdf|1.C.pdf]])
* Complex Exponential and Logarithm ([[Media:CAnal.5.A.CLog.20131017.pdf|5.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.5.A.Octave.pdf|5.B.pdf]])
* Complex Trigonometric and Hyperbolic ([[Media:CAnal.7.A.CTrigHyper..pdf|7.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.7.A.Octave..pdf|7.B.pdf]])
'''Complex Function Note'''
: 1. Exp and Log Function Note ([[Media:ComplexExp.29160721.pdf|H1.pdf]])
: 2. Trig and TrigH Function Note ([[Media:CAnal.Trig-H.29160901.pdf|H1.pdf]])
: 3. Inverse Trig and TrigH Functions Note ([[Media:CAnal.Hyper.29160829.pdf|H1.pdf]])
==''' Complex Integrals '''==
* Complex Integrals ([[Media:CAnal.2.A.CIntegral.20140224.Basic.pdf|2.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.2.B.CIntegral.20140117.Octave.pdf|2.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.2.C.CIntegral.20140117.Extend.pdf|2.C.pdf]])
==''' Complex Series '''==
* Complex Series ([[Media:CPX.Series.20150226.2.Basic.pdf|3.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.3.B.CSeries.20140121.Octave.pdf|3.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.3.C.CSeries.20140303.Extend.pdf|3.C.pdf]])
==''' Residue Integrals '''==
* Residue Integrals ([[Media:CAnal.4.A.Residue.20140227.Basic.pdf|4.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.4.B.pdf|4.B.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.4.C.Residue.20140423.Extend.pdf|4.C.pdf]])
==='''Residue Integrals Note'''===
* Laurent Series with the Residue Theorem Note ([[Media:Laurent.1.Residue.20170713.pdf|H1.pdf]])
* Laurent Series with Applications Note ([[Media:Laurent.2.Applications.20170327.pdf|H1.pdf]])
* Laurent Series and the z-Transform Note ([[Media:Laurent.3.z-Trans.20170831.pdf|H1.pdf]])
* Laurent Series as a Geometric Series Note ([[Media:Laurent.4.GSeries.20170802.pdf|H1.pdf]])
=== Laurent Series and the z-Transform Example Note ===
* Overview ([[Media:Laurent.4.z-Example.20170926.pdf|H1.pdf]])
====Geometric Series Examples====
* Causality ([[Media:Laurent.5.Causality.1.A.20191026n.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Causality.1.B.20191026.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Time Shift ([[Media:Laurent.5.TimeShift.2.A.20191028.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.TimeShift.2.B.20191029.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Reciprocity ([[Media:Laurent.5.Reciprocity.3A.20191030.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Reciprocity.3B.20191031.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Combinations ([[Media:Laurent.5.Combination.4A.20200702.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Combination.4B.20201002.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Properties ([[Media:Laurent.5.Property.5A.20220105.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Property.5B.20220126.pdf|B.pdf]])
* Permutations ([[Media:Laurent.6.Permutation.6A.20230711.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Permutation.6B.20251225.pdf|B.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Permutation.6C.20260513.pdf|C.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.Permutation.6C.20240528.pdf|D.pdf]])
* Applications ([[Media:Laurent.5.Application.6B.20220723.pdf|A.pdf]])
* Double Pole Case
:- Examples ([[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleEx.7A.20220722.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleEx.7B.20220720.pdf|B.pdf]])
:- Properties ([[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleProp.5A.20190226.pdf|A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.5.DPoleProp.5B.20190228.pdf|B.pdf]])
====The Case Examples====
* Example Overview : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.0.A.20171208.pdf|0A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.6.CaseExample.0.B.20180205.pdf|0B.pdf]])
* Example Case 1 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.1.A.20171107.pdf|1A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.1.B.20171227.pdf|1B.pdf]])
* Example Case 2 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.2.A.20171107.pdf|2A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.2.B.20171227.pdf|2B.pdf]])
* Example Case 3 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.3.A.20171017.pdf|3A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.3.B.20171226.pdf|3B.pdf]])
* Example Case 4 : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.4.A.20171017.pdf|4A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.4.B.20171228.pdf|4B.pdf]])
* Example Summary : ([[Media:Laurent.4.Example.5.A.20171212.pdf|5A.pdf]], [[Media:Laurent.4.Example.5.B.20171230.pdf|5B.pdf]])
==''' Conformal Mapping '''==
* Conformal Mapping ([[Media:CAnal.6.A.Conformal.20131224.pdf|6.A.pdf]], [[Media:CAnal.6.A.Octave..pdf|6.B.pdf]])
go to [ [[Electrical_%26_Computer_Engineering_Studies]] ]
[[Category:Complex analysis]]
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Wikiversity:Curator
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Bot: Fixing double redirect to [[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
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#REDIRECT [[Wikiversity:Curatorship]]
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Wikiversity:Curatorship
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{{Policy|WV:CUR}}
[[File:Wikiversity Curator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Curators''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They can [[#Deletion of pages|delete]] and restore pages, use [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]], [[Wikiversity:Import|import]] from other wikis, and [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages.
== How does one become a curator? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can curators do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a curator. If you have a good editing record, then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of curatorship. If you are still interested in being a curator, here is the process:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for curatorship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of curator privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodian agrees to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a curator. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise, your mentor may remove curator privileges after 48 hours without any further notice or community discussion.
|}
== What can curators do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/WHAT}}
=== Deletion of pages ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Deletions}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]] {{shortcut|WV:CUR/D}}
Curators can delete pages including images, categories, templates, and so on. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and restorations can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]]. Curators may delete pages, but they do not have undelete rights.
Before deleting a page, you are encouraged to read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
{{See also|Wikiversity:Page protection}}
Curators can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians and non-curators from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian or curator upon request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Rollback}}
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Curators have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "{{int:Revertpage}}" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== Import ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Import}}
Curators have access to the [[Special:Import|import tool]], to bring in materials from projects such as Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
== What can't curators do? ==
Curators cannot block or assign user rights. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] permissions, respectively. Removal of user rights can only be carried out by [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards meta-wiki]].
== How are curators expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/E}}
Curators are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
==Problems with curators==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity curator, the first thing to do is leave a message on that curator's user discussion page. Curators should always be able to explain how their actions support the Wikiversity project. If you did not get a satisfactory answer after a discussion with the curator, follow up with their mentor. Actions of a curator are ultimately the responsibility of their mentor(s). Any custodian may remove a curator's rights, but first try to resolve all curator problems by discussion. Post a request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] if discussion does not successfully resolve the issue.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/N}}
* Curatorship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for curatorship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, curators have no more power or weight than other users. "Curatorship is not a big deal."
* Curators should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). The curator should be notified on their talk page and, if there is no response after one month, a custodian will remove the rights.
== Useful reads for curators ==
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
* [[Special:ListUsers/curator|List of current Wikiversity curators]]
* [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity curatorship]]
[[Category:Wikiversity user roles]]
mfmk69sbv8pwtkht6va60d77yxhg2x9
2808969
2808968
2026-05-13T22:45:56Z
Jtneill
10242
/* What can't curators do? */
2808969
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Policy|WV:CUR}}
[[File:Wikiversity Curator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Curators''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They can [[#Deletion of pages|delete]] and restore pages, use [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]], [[Wikiversity:Import|import]] from other wikis, and [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages.
== How does one become a curator? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can curators do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a curator. If you have a good editing record, then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of curatorship. If you are still interested in being a curator, here is the process:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for curatorship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of curator privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodian agrees to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a curator. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise, your mentor may remove curator privileges after 48 hours without any further notice or community discussion.
|}
== What can curators do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/WHAT}}
=== Deletion of pages ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Deletions}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]] {{shortcut|WV:CUR/D}}
Curators can delete pages including images, categories, templates, and so on. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and restorations can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]]. Curators may delete pages, but they do not have undelete rights.
Before deleting a page, you are encouraged to read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
{{See also|Wikiversity:Page protection}}
Curators can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians and non-curators from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian or curator upon request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Rollback}}
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Curators have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "{{int:Revertpage}}" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== Import ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Import}}
Curators have access to the [[Special:Import|import tool]], to bring in materials from projects such as Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
== What can't curators do? ==
Curators cannot block users or assign user rights. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] permissions, respectively. Removal of user rights can only be carried out by [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards meta-wiki]].
== How are curators expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/E}}
Curators are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
==Problems with curators==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity curator, the first thing to do is leave a message on that curator's user discussion page. Curators should always be able to explain how their actions support the Wikiversity project. If you did not get a satisfactory answer after a discussion with the curator, follow up with their mentor. Actions of a curator are ultimately the responsibility of their mentor(s). Any custodian may remove a curator's rights, but first try to resolve all curator problems by discussion. Post a request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] if discussion does not successfully resolve the issue.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/N}}
* Curatorship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for curatorship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, curators have no more power or weight than other users. "Curatorship is not a big deal."
* Curators should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). The curator should be notified on their talk page and, if there is no response after one month, a custodian will remove the rights.
== Useful reads for curators ==
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
* [[Special:ListUsers/curator|List of current Wikiversity curators]]
* [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity curatorship]]
[[Category:Wikiversity user roles]]
j6r70k1uw6lkeduzflm50b4zthwf7ul
2808970
2808969
2026-05-13T22:47:13Z
Jtneill
10242
/* What can't curators do? */ + link to blocking proposed policy
2808970
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Policy|WV:CUR}}
[[File:Wikiversity Curator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Curators''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They can [[#Deletion of pages|delete]] and restore pages, use [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]], [[Wikiversity:Import|import]] from other wikis, and [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages.
== How does one become a curator? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can curators do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a curator. If you have a good editing record, then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of curatorship. If you are still interested in being a curator, here is the process:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for curatorship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of curator privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodian agrees to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a curator. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise, your mentor may remove curator privileges after 48 hours without any further notice or community discussion.
|}
== What can curators do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/WHAT}}
=== Deletion of pages ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Deletions}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]] {{shortcut|WV:CUR/D}}
Curators can delete pages including images, categories, templates, and so on. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and restorations can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]]. Curators may delete pages, but they do not have undelete rights.
Before deleting a page, you are encouraged to read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
{{See also|Wikiversity:Page protection}}
Curators can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians and non-curators from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian or curator upon request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Rollback}}
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Curators have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "{{int:Revertpage}}" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== Import ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Import}}
Curators have access to the [[Special:Import|import tool]], to bring in materials from projects such as Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
== What can't curators do? ==
Curators cannot [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy|block users]] or assign user rights. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] permissions, respectively. Removal of user rights can only be carried out by [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards meta-wiki]].
== How are curators expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/E}}
Curators are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
==Problems with curators==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity curator, the first thing to do is leave a message on that curator's user discussion page. Curators should always be able to explain how their actions support the Wikiversity project. If you did not get a satisfactory answer after a discussion with the curator, follow up with their mentor. Actions of a curator are ultimately the responsibility of their mentor(s). Any custodian may remove a curator's rights, but first try to resolve all curator problems by discussion. Post a request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] if discussion does not successfully resolve the issue.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/N}}
* Curatorship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for curatorship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, curators have no more power or weight than other users. "Curatorship is not a big deal."
* Curators should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). The curator should be notified on their talk page and, if there is no response after one month, a custodian will remove the rights.
== Useful reads for curators ==
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
* [[Special:ListUsers/curator|List of current Wikiversity curators]]
* [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity curatorship]]
[[Category:Wikiversity user roles]]
2w9ncrel4bs5ia0ovgipjr1a0tujfoy
2808971
2808970
2026-05-13T22:48:12Z
Jtneill
10242
/* What can't curators do? */
2808971
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Policy|WV:CUR}}
[[File:Wikiversity Curator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Curators''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They can [[#Deletion of pages|delete]] and restore pages, use [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]], [[Wikiversity:Import|import]] from other wikis, and [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages.
== How does one become a curator? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can curators do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a curator. If you have a good editing record, then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of curatorship. If you are still interested in being a curator, here is the process:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for curatorship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of curator privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodian agrees to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a curator. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise, your mentor may remove curator privileges after 48 hours without any further notice or community discussion.
|}
== What can curators do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/WHAT}}
=== Deletion of pages ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Deletions}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]] {{shortcut|WV:CUR/D}}
Curators can delete pages including images, categories, templates, and so on. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and restorations can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]]. Curators may delete pages, but they do not have undelete rights.
Before deleting a page, you are encouraged to read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
{{See also|Wikiversity:Page protection}}
Curators can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians and non-curators from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian or curator upon request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Rollback}}
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Curators have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "{{int:Revertpage}}" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== Import ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Import}}
Curators have access to the [[Special:Import|import tool]], to bring in materials from projects such as Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
== What can't curators do? ==
Curators cannot [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy|block users]] or assign user rights. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] permissions, respectively. Removal of user rights can only be carried out by [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards]] from meta-wiki.
== How are curators expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/E}}
Curators are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
==Problems with curators==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity curator, the first thing to do is leave a message on that curator's user discussion page. Curators should always be able to explain how their actions support the Wikiversity project. If you did not get a satisfactory answer after a discussion with the curator, follow up with their mentor. Actions of a curator are ultimately the responsibility of their mentor(s). Any custodian may remove a curator's rights, but first try to resolve all curator problems by discussion. Post a request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] if discussion does not successfully resolve the issue.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/N}}
* Curatorship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for curatorship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, curators have no more power or weight than other users. "Curatorship is not a big deal."
* Curators should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity <u>without community review</u> for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). The curator should be notified on their talk page and, if there is no response after one month, a custodian will remove the rights.
== Useful reads for curators ==
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
* [[Special:ListUsers/curator|List of current Wikiversity curators]]
* [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity curatorship]]
[[Category:Wikiversity user roles]]
9dwgk8d4z9riuallpmzrjhonqbak24g
2808972
2808971
2026-05-13T22:51:08Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Notes */ + links to [[Wikiversity:Community Review]] and [[Template:Inactive curator|notified on their talk page]]
2808972
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Policy|WV:CUR}}
[[File:Wikiversity Curator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Curators''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They can [[#Deletion of pages|delete]] and restore pages, use [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]], [[Wikiversity:Import|import]] from other wikis, and [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages.
== How does one become a curator? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can curators do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a curator. If you have a good editing record, then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of curatorship. If you are still interested in being a curator, here is the process:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for curatorship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of curator privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodian agrees to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a curator. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise, your mentor may remove curator privileges after 48 hours without any further notice or community discussion.
|}
== What can curators do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/WHAT}}
=== Deletion of pages ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Deletions}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]] {{shortcut|WV:CUR/D}}
Curators can delete pages including images, categories, templates, and so on. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It is merely invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request, which may be submitted at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and restorations can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]]. Curators may delete pages, but they do not have undelete rights.
Before deleting a page, you are encouraged to read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
{{See also|Wikiversity:Page protection}}
Curators can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians and non-curators from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian or curator upon request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Rollback}}
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Curators have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "{{int:Revertpage}}" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== Import ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Import}}
Curators have access to the [[Special:Import|import tool]], to bring in materials from projects such as Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
== What can't curators do? ==
Curators cannot [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy|block users]] or assign user rights. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] permissions, respectively. Removal of user rights can only be carried out by [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards]] from meta-wiki.
== How are curators expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/E}}
Curators are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
==Problems with curators==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity curator, the first thing to do is leave a message on that curator's user discussion page. Curators should always be able to explain how their actions support the Wikiversity project. If you did not get a satisfactory answer after a discussion with the curator, follow up with their mentor. Actions of a curator are ultimately the responsibility of their mentor(s). Any custodian may remove a curator's rights, but first try to resolve all curator problems by discussion. Post a request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] if discussion does not successfully resolve the issue.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/N}}
* Curatorship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for curatorship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, curators have no more power or weight than other users. "Curatorship is not a big deal."
* Curators should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity without [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]] for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). The curator should be [[Template:Inactive curator|notified on their talk page]] and, if there is no response after one month, a custodian will remove the rights.
== Useful reads for curators ==
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
* [[Special:ListUsers/curator|List of current Wikiversity curators]]
* [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity curatorship]]
[[Category:Wikiversity user roles]]
ky6j85z5ml41hhm3fhgfyr4e31a79ri
2808993
2808972
2026-05-14T00:04:07Z
Jtneill
10242
2808993
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Policy|WV:CUR}}
[[File:Wikiversity Curator.svg|right|130px|link=]]
'''Curators''' are part of [[Wikiversity]]'s [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. They can [[#Deletion of pages|delete]] pages, use [[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback]], [[Wikiversity:Import|import]] from other wikis, and [[#Edit and move protection of pages|protect]] and unprotect pages.
== How does one become a curator? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/HOW}}
Any [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|Wikiversity participant]] willing to do a lot of [[#What can curators do?|dull and boring work]] for the community can become a curator. If you have a good editing record, then you are likely to be trusted and granted the privileges and responsibilities of curatorship. If you are still interested in being a curator, here is the process:
{| style="border-collapse: collapse" border="1" cellpadding="4"
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | I
|
<div id="Request">
;Request
</div>
You must request or be nominated for curatorship at [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship]]. State your reasons for seeking this position and in what areas you are or would like to be active. You may also refer to your contributions and indicate whether you have similar responsibilities at other projects.
|-
| style="padding: 10px; text-align: center" | II
|
<div id="Mentorship">
;Mentorship
</div>
[[Wikiversity:List of custodian mentors|Custodian mentors]] are expected to guide and advise you on the appropriate use of curator privileges in accordance with established policy and community consensus. If any experienced custodian agrees to mentor you and you agree to their mentorship, then you will be approved as a curator. If you have any questions or concerns, you should contact your mentor(s) for guidance and advice. If you or your mentor terminate the mentorship agreement, you will have 48 hours to find a new mentor. Otherwise, your mentor may remove curator privileges after 48 hours without any further notice or community discussion.
|}
== What can curators do? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/WHAT}}
=== Deletion of pages ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Deletions}}
[[File:Delete and Protect buttons.png|200px|right]] {{shortcut|WV:CUR/D}}
Curators can delete pages including images, categories, templates, and so on. Deletion is subject to [[Wikiversity:Policies|policy]]. Deletion requests may be submitted by any user at [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]].
Deleting a page does not actually remove it from the database. It merely becomes invisible to non-custodians and can be restored at request via [[Wikiversity:Requests for Deletion]]. Page deletions and restorations can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/delete|deletion log]]. Curators may delete pages, but they do not have undelete rights.
Before deleting a page, you are encouraged to read: [[Wikiversity:Welcome templates]].
=== Edit and move protection of pages ===
{{See also|Wikiversity:Page protection}}
Curators can [[Wikiversity:Page protection|protect pages]] to prevent editing. There are two types of page protection: semi-protection, which prevents anonymous and new users from editing, and full protection, which prevents all non-custodians and non-curators from editing. A page can also be protected to prevent moving. Page protection can be lifted by any custodian or curator upon request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]. Page protections and unprotections can be monitored by viewing the [[Special:Log/protect|protection log]].
=== Rollback ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Rollback}}
[[Image:Rollback button.png|thumb|300px|Rollback button]]
Curators have a ''[[Wikiversity:Rollback|rollback tool]]'' to revert the last change or group of changes made to a page by the same user. There is no option to provide an edit summary when using this tool. Instead, a summary such as "{{int:Revertpage}}" will be used automatically. This tool is primarily used to respond to obvious vandalism. For other edit reversions, the rollback button should not be used and a good edit summary should be provided.
=== Import ===
{{see also|Wikiversity:Import}}
Curators have access to the [[Special:Import|import tool]], to bring in materials from projects such as Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Beta Wikiversity, Wikiquote, and Wikisource.
== What can't curators do? ==
Curators cannot [[Wikiversity:Blocking policy|block users]] or assign user rights. These actions require [[Wikiversity:Custodianship|custodian]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|bureaucrat]] permissions, respectively. Removal of user rights can only be carried out by [[m:Steward requests/Permissions|stewards]] from meta-wiki.
== How are curators expected to act? ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/E}}
Curators are supposed to follow the same principles as every other user, including [[Wikiversity:Civility|being civil]], [[Wikiversity:Assume Good Faith|assuming good faith]], and understanding [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity?|what Wikiversity is]]. They are expected to act professionally, and to respect policy and [[Wikiversity:Consensus|community consensus]].
==Problems with curators==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/P}}
If you have a question about an action (page deletion, page protection, violation of Wikiversity policy or some other action that does serious damage to the project) by a Wikiversity curator, the first thing to do is leave a message on that curator's user discussion page. Curators should always be able to explain how their actions support the Wikiversity project. If you did not get a satisfactory answer after a discussion with the curator, follow up with their mentor. Actions of a curator are ultimately the responsibility of their mentor(s). Any custodian may remove a curator's rights, but first try to resolve all curator problems by discussion. Post a request at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]] if discussion does not successfully resolve the issue.
== Notes ==
{{shortcut|WV:CUR/N}}
* Curatorship is a responsibility, not a right. While everyone is encouraged to apply for curatorship, the position is not suited for everyone. Please also note that in all instances not listed above, curators have no more power or weight than other users. "Curatorship is not a big deal."
* Curators should set their "user preferences" so as to provide for email contacts from other Wikiversity participants. If you do not use email, then you must make yourself easily available by some other means such as [[Wikiversity:Chat|IRC chat]].
* The maximum time period of inactivity without [[Wikiversity:Community Review|community review]] for curators is two years (consistent with the [[:meta:Category:Global policies|global policy]] described at [[meta:Admin activity review|Admin activity review]] which applies for [[Wikiversity:Custodianship#Notes|Custodians]] and [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship|Bureaucrats]]). The curator should be [[Template:Inactive curator|notified on their talk page]] and, if there is no response after one month, a custodian will remove the rights.
== Useful reads for curators ==
===Wikiversity===
* [[Wikiversity:No shrines for vandals]]
* [[Wikiversity:Policies]]
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop/Wikiversity]]
===MediaWiki/Wikimedia===
* [[How to be a Wikimedia sysop]]
* [[b:MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook|MediaWiki Administrator's Handbook]]
==See also==
* [[Special:ListUsers/curator|List of current Wikiversity curators]]
* [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]
* [[Wikiversity:Support staff|Wikiversity:Staff]]
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity curatorship]]
[[Category:Wikiversity user roles]]
018u367dh8tlpvbcoqnyg4x632viplw
MediaWiki:Abusefilter-warning
8
221114
2809028
1985330
2026-05-14T02:27:25Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
/* top */ Adding mw-parser-output. using [[Project:AWB|AWB]]
2809028
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<div class="mw-parser-output">
{{mbox
| type = content
| text = <big>'''Warning'''</big>: This action has been automatically identified as potentially harmful.
Unconstructive actions will be quickly reverted,
and egregious or repeated unconstructive editing will result in your account or IP address being blocked.
If you believe this action to be constructive, you may submit it again to confirm it.
A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: $1
}}
</div>
fquo9xr908tp9cyt3bu6ymjdvapftna
OpenStax College Physics
0
231663
2808991
1910631
2026-05-13T23:49:32Z
PieWriter
3039865
2808991
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{See also|OpenStax}}
[[File:College-physics-9.72.pdf|right|200px|thumb|
[http://cnx.org/content/col11406/latest Latest online version]<br>
Older versions:<br> - [[:File:College-physics-9.72.pdf|Wikiversity file]]<br>
- [https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiversity/en/2/20/College-physics-9.72.pdf Read online] ]]
This page is dedicated to the [[OpenStax]] textbook on the algebra-based College Physics. The calculus bases textbook is [[OpenStax University Physics]].
==Subpages==
{{Subpages/List}}
[[Category:OpenStax]]
[[Category:Quizbank]]
8pamdncmxe7el75gmdkvc2k0rtxnvyk
Programming Fundamentals/Introduction/Assembly
0
244233
2809063
2141534
2026-05-14T03:51:24Z
~2026-28955-74
3075228
/* hello_x86.asm */
2809063
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== hello_x86.asm ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="asm">
;This program displays "Hello world!"
;
section .text
global _start
_start:
mov edx, len
mov ecx, msg
mov ebx, 1
mov eax, 4
int 0x80
mov eax, 1
int 0x80
section .data
msg db 'Hello, world!', 0xa
len equ $ - msg
</syntaxhighlight>
== hello_x64.asm ==
== Try It ==
Copy and paste the code above into one of the following free online development environments or use your own {{SUBPAGENAME}} compiler / interpreter / IDE.
{{:{{ROOTPAGENAME}}/IDE/{{SUBPAGENAME}}/Online/Free}}
== See Also ==
* [[Assembly language]]
* [[Wikibooks: x86 Disassembly]]
* [https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assembly_programming/ TutorialsPoint: Assembly Programming]
* [http://cs.lmu.edu/~ray/notes/nasmtutorial/ LMU: NASM Tutorial]
* [https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/l-gas-nasm/index.html IBM: Linux assemblers: A comparison of GAS and NASM]
* [https://github.com/Captainarash/The_Holy_Book_of_X86/ Github: The Holy Book of X86]
{{subpage navbar}}
{{CourseCat}}
[[Category:Assembly language]]
sa7dulkn98uv0tza2b2kwecvh2suqdk
Wikiversity:Notices for custodians/Header
4
246580
2809014
2665159
2026-05-14T01:54:38Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
Updating the header.
2809014
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<includeonly>__NEWSECTIONLINK__ {{Nobots}}</includeonly>
<div style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 10px;">
{{Portal-head2|547892|Welcome}}
{{Administering Wikiversity}}
{{Shortcut|WV:NOTICE|WV:AN}}
This page is used for posting notices of interest to custodians and [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. When creating a new request, please sign with <code><nowiki>--~~~~</nowiki></code>.
* Join us on IRC channel [[irc:wikiversity|#wikiversity]] to coordinate activities in real time.
* View recent changes in real time on IRC channel [[ircrc:en.wikiversity|#en.wikiversity]].
* [[Wikiversity:Import|Request pages to be imported]].
* '''Please''' look at [[Special:Unwatchedpages]] and add some pages that are of interest to you to your watchlist.
<includeonly>* '''Please''' review the [[/Archive|archives]] for past discussions.</includeonly>
*See also: [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]
</div><includeonly>
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship]]
</includeonly>
pzwzopz9mxd2ctn8h8ar6p45sm1rans
2809015
2809014
2026-05-14T01:55:10Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
This will also need the clear template.
2809015
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<includeonly>__NEWSECTIONLINK__ {{Nobots}}</includeonly>
<div style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 10px;">
{{Portal-head2|547892|Welcome}}
{{Administering Wikiversity}}
{{Shortcut|WV:NOTICE|WV:AN}}
This page is used for posting notices of interest to custodians and [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. When creating a new request, please sign with <code><nowiki>--~~~~</nowiki></code>.
* Join us on IRC channel [[irc:wikiversity|#wikiversity]] to coordinate activities in real time.
* View recent changes in real time on IRC channel [[ircrc:en.wikiversity|#en.wikiversity]].
* [[Wikiversity:Import|Request pages to be imported]].
* '''Please''' look at [[Special:Unwatchedpages]] and add some pages that are of interest to you to your watchlist.
<includeonly>* '''Please''' review the [[/Archive|archives]] for past discussions.</includeonly>
*See also: [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]
</div>
{{Clear}}<includeonly>
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship]]
</includeonly>
fmqh5j7voiztvflh0lehcuhcy5thr0m
2809024
2809015
2026-05-14T02:05:04Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
Updating.
2809024
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<includeonly>__NEWSECTIONLINK__{{Nobots}}</includeonly>{{RoundBoxTop|theme=14}}
{{Portal-head2|2=Welcome}}
<hr>
{{Administering Wikiversity}}
{{Shortcut|WV:NOTICE|WV:AN}}
This page is used for posting notices of interest to custodians and [[Wikiversity:Support staff|support staff]]. When creating a new request, please sign with <code><nowiki>--~~~~</nowiki></code>.
* Join us on IRC channel [[irc:wikiversity|#wikiversity]] to coordinate activities in real time.
* View recent changes in real time on IRC channel [[ircrc:en.wikiversity|#en.wikiversity]].
* [[Wikiversity:Import|Request pages to be imported]].
* '''Please''' look at [[Special:Unwatchedpages]] and add some pages that are of interest to you to your watchlist.
<includeonly>* '''Please''' review the [[/Archive|archives]] for past discussions.</includeonly>
* See also: [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]]
{{RoundBoxBottom}}<includeonly>
[[Category:Wikiversity administration]]
[[Category:Wikiversity custodianship]]
</includeonly>
brw2jyy01scbp862ga595rsmy1cnpry
Module:Shortcut
828
253048
2809017
2289552
2026-05-14T01:59:46Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
Importing from English Wikiquote.
2809017
Scribunto
text/plain
-- This module implements {{shortcut}}.
-- Set constants
local CONFIG_MODULE = 'Module:Shortcut/config'
-- Load required modules
local checkType = require('libraryUtil').checkType
local yesno = require('Module:Yesno')
local p = {}
local function message(msg, ...)
return mw.message.newRawMessage(msg, ...):plain()
end
local function makeCategoryLink(cat)
return string.format('[[%s:%s]]', mw.site.namespaces[14].name, cat)
end
function p._main(shortcuts, options, frame, cfg)
checkType('_main', 1, shortcuts, 'table')
checkType('_main', 2, options, 'table', true)
options = options or {}
frame = frame or mw.getCurrentFrame()
cfg = cfg or mw.loadData(CONFIG_MODULE)
local templateMode = options.template and yesno(options.template)
local redirectMode = options.redirect and yesno(options.redirect)
local isCategorized = not options.category or yesno(options.category) ~= false
-- Validate shortcuts
for i, shortcut in ipairs(shortcuts) do
if type(shortcut) ~= 'string' or #shortcut < 1 then
error(message(cfg['invalid-shortcut-error'], i), 2)
end
end
-- Make the list items. These are the shortcuts plus any extra lines such
-- as options.msg.
local listItems = {}
for i, shortcut in ipairs(shortcuts) do
local templatePath, prefix
if templateMode then
-- Namespace detection
local titleObj = mw.title.new(shortcut, 10)
if titleObj.namespace == 10 then
templatePath = titleObj.fullText
else
templatePath = shortcut
end
prefix = options['pre' .. i] or options.pre or ''
end
if options.target and yesno(options.target) then
listItems[i] = templateMode
and string.format("{{%s[[%s|%s]]}}", prefix, templatePath, shortcut)
or string.format("[[%s]]", shortcut)
else
listItems[i] = frame:expandTemplate{
title = 'No redirect',
args = templateMode and {templatePath, shortcut} or {shortcut, shortcut}
}
if templateMode then
listItems[i] = string.format("{{%s%s}}", prefix, listItems[i])
end
end
end
table.insert(listItems, options.msg)
-- Return an error if we have nothing to display
if #listItems < 1 then
local msg = cfg['no-content-error']
msg = string.format('<strong class="error">%s</strong>', msg)
if isCategorized and cfg['no-content-error-category'] then
msg = msg .. makeCategoryLink(cfg['no-content-error-category'])
end
return msg
end
local root = mw.html.create()
root:wikitext(frame:extensionTag{ name = 'templatestyles', args = { src = 'Module:Shortcut/styles.css'} })
-- Anchors
local anchorDiv = root
:tag('div')
:addClass('module-shortcutanchordiv')
for i, shortcut in ipairs(shortcuts) do
local anchor = mw.uri.anchorEncode(shortcut)
anchorDiv:tag('span'):attr('id', anchor)
end
-- Shortcut heading
local shortcutHeading
do
local nShortcuts = #shortcuts
if nShortcuts > 0 then
local headingMsg = options['shortcut-heading'] or
redirectMode and cfg['redirect-heading'] or
cfg['shortcut-heading']
shortcutHeading = message(headingMsg, nShortcuts)
shortcutHeading = frame:preprocess(shortcutHeading)
end
end
-- Shortcut box
local shortcutList = root
:tag('div')
:addClass('module-shortcutboxplain noprint')
:attr('role', 'note')
if options.float and options.float:lower() == 'left' then
shortcutList:addClass('module-shortcutboxleft')
end
if options.clear and options.clear ~= '' then
shortcutList:css('clear', options.clear)
end
if shortcutHeading then
shortcutList
:tag('div')
:addClass('module-shortcutlist')
:wikitext(shortcutHeading)
end
local ubl = require('Module:List').unbulleted(listItems)
shortcutList:wikitext(ubl)
return tostring(root)
end
function p.main(frame)
local args = require('Module:Arguments').getArgs(frame)
-- Separate shortcuts from options
local shortcuts, options = {}, {}
for k, v in pairs(args) do
if type(k) == 'number' then
shortcuts[k] = v
else
options[k] = v
end
end
-- Compress the shortcut array, which may contain nils.
local function compressArray(t)
local nums, ret = {}, {}
for k in pairs(t) do
nums[#nums + 1] = k
end
table.sort(nums)
for i, num in ipairs(nums) do
ret[i] = t[num]
end
return ret
end
shortcuts = compressArray(shortcuts)
return p._main(shortcuts, options, frame)
end
return p
0grxrt10usr45p0y9yes29aw6xnxg7j
MediaWiki:Pagecreation-warning
8
257227
2809029
2105584
2026-05-14T02:27:38Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
/* top */ Adding mw-parser-output. using [[Project:AWB|AWB]]
2809029
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<div class="mw-parser-output">
{{mbox
| type = content
| text = <big>'''Warning'''</big>: This account is temporarily blocked from creating new pages. A brief description of the abuse rule which your action matched is: $1
}}
</div>
4w2sj87fheqyr1s4nldqbwwqjcm5u0u
Social Victorians/People/Sarah Spencer-Churchill Wilson
0
263839
2808920
2808655
2026-05-13T17:42:34Z
Scogdill
1331941
2808920
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Overview ==
== Acquaintances, Friends and Enemies ==
== Organizations ==
=== Lady Sarah Wilson ===
*"[[Social Victorians/People/Working in Publishing#Journalists|aristocratic lady journalist]]"
*Lady Sarah Wilson, journalist for the ''Daily Mail''<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|date=2020-07-06|title=Sarah Wilson (war correspondent)|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sarah_Wilson_(war_correspondent)&oldid=966295858|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}}</ref>
=== Gordon Wilson ===
*Gordon Wilson, Royal Horse Guards
*Gordon Wilson, Robert Baden-Powell's aide de camp at Mafeking
=== Wilfred Wilson ===
* 5th Battalion Imperial Yeomanry
== Timeline ==
'''1861''', Sir Samuel Wilson and Jeanne Campbell married.<ref name=":2">"Sir Samuel Wilson." {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KDw6AQAAMAAJ|title=Armorial Families: A Complete Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage, and a Directory of Some Gentlemen of Coat-armour, and Being the First Attempt to Show which Arms in Use at the Moment are Borne by Legal Authority|last=Fox-Davies|first=Arthur Charles|date=1895|publisher=Jack|language=en}} 1047, Col. 1a.</ref>
'''1891 November 21''', Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill and Gordon Chesney Wilson married.<ref>"Lady Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill." {{Cite web|url=https://www.thepeerage.com/p10633.htm#i106326|title=Person Page|website=www.thepeerage.com|access-date=2020-10-20}}</ref>
'''1892 June 11''', Adeline Constance Wilson and Right Hon. the Earl of Huntingdon married.<ref name=":2" />
'''1897 July 2, Friday''', Lady Sarah Wilson and Captain Gordon Wilson attended the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball | Duchess of Devonshire's fancy-dress ball]] at Devonshire House, as did Mr. Wilfred Wilson, Mr. Clarence Wilson, and Mr. Herbert Wilson.
[[File:Madame de Pompadour.jpg|alt=Old painting of a woman in a very ornate dress with an open book|thumb|Madame de Pompadour, 1756, ]]
== Costume at the Duchess of Devonshire's 2 July 1897 Fancy-dress Ball ==
=== Lady Sarah Wilson ===
[[File:Lady-Sarah-Isabella-Augusta-Wilson-ne-Spencer-Churchill-as-Madame-de-Pompadour.jpg|thumb|left|alt=Black-and-white photograph of a standing woman richly dressed in an historical costume with a dog|Lady Sarah Wilson as Madame de Pompadour. ©National Portrait Gallery, London.]]
At the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball | Duchess of Devonshire's fancy-dress ball]], Lady Sarah Wilson went as Madame de Pompadour.<ref>"Duchess of Devonshire's Fancy Ball. A Brilliant Spectacle. Some of the Dresses." London ''Daily News'' Saturday 3 July 1897: 5 [of 10], Col. 6a–6, Col. 1b. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000051/18970703/024/0005 and https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0000051/18970703/024/0006.</ref>{{rp|p. 5, Col. 7c}}
John Thomson's portrait (left) of "Lady Sarah Isabella Augusta Wilson (née Spencer-Churchill) as Madame de Pompadour" in costume is photogravure #157 in the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball/Photographs#The Album of Photographs|album]] presented to the Duchess of Devonshire and now in the National Portrait Gallery.<ref name=":1">"Devonshire House Fancy Dress Ball (1897): photogravures by Walker & Boutall after various photographers." 1899. National Portrait Gallery https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait-list.php?set=515.</ref> The printing on the portrait says, "Lady Sarah Wilson as Madame de Pompadour."<ref>"Lady Sarah Wilson as Madame de Pompadour." ''Diamond Jubilee Fancy Dress Ball''. National Portrait Gallery https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw158520/Lady-Sarah-Isabella-Augusta-Wilson-ne-Spencer-Churchill-as-Madame-de-Pompadour.</ref>
If Lady Sarah Wilson's dress is indeed blue, as the descriptions say, then Thomson's portrait is an excellent example of how difficult it can be to guess the colors of things in black-and-white photographs. Although the album (and the National Portrait Gallery, London) credit Thomson for the photograph, the portrait of Lady Sarah from the album looks more like a painting than a photograph. Perhaps it was retouched to make it look less photographic and more painterly.
Surprisingly, two portraits of Lady Sarah appear in the Lafayette Archive, suggesting that she also had her photograph taken by the Lafayette firm, perhaps at the ball itself. The Lafayette Archive lists 2 photographs but provides only one:
* http://lafayette.org.uk/wil1366.html
This image is a higher resolution and more clear, and it is not retouched to appear more like a painted portrait. Not all particulars of her costume are identical in the Lafayette and Thomson portraits.
Another image of Lady Sarah Wilson in costume appeared in the ''Queen'' (bottom middle of the page, the numeral 17 below the line drawing, seated, facing slightly to her right, the drawing shows a dress similar to her costume in her photograph, bows and ruffles emphasized; the drawing apparently signed by “Rook”).<ref name=":8">“Dresses Worn at the Duchess of Devonshire’s Fancy Ball on July 2.” The ''Queen'', The Lady’s Newspaper 10 July 1897, Saturday: 52 [of 98 BNA; p. 78 on printed page], full page [3 of 3 cols.]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0002627/18970710/174/0052.</ref>{{rp|Col. 2b–c}}
François Boucher's 1756 portrait of Madame de Pompadour (above right) shows Jeanne Antoinette Poisson, Madame de Pompadour at about 35 years old.<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|date=2023-12-13|title=Madame de Pompadour|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Madame_de_Pompadour&oldid=1189755757|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madame_de_Pompadour.</ref> Lady Sarah Wilson was nearly 32 years old at the time of the ball. (The color of the dress in this image may not be true to the painting; a different copy shows it looking bluer.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2023-12-13|title=Madame de Pompadour|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Madame_de_Pompadour&oldid=1189755757|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madame_de_Pompadour#/media/File:Madame_de_Pompadour.jpg</ref>)
[[File:François Boucher - Portrait of Marquise de Pompadour - WGA02909.jpg|thumb|Madame de Pompadour, Boucher, 1759, with Friendship's consolation of Love behind her]]
Another Boucher portrait of Madame de Pompadour (right), painted in 1759 when she was 38,<ref name=":7" /> shows her in a very similar dress, though pink and yellow rather than blue or blue-green. We can see how the skirt falls when she is standing.
==== Madame de Pompadour ====
Politically active, Madame de Pompadour was Louis XV's official chief mistress until 1751 and lady in waiting to the Queen, Polish Marie Leszczyńska.<ref name=":7" /> She was leader of fashionable society until Louis XV's death and Marie Antoinette's rise displaced her.
==== Newspaper Accounts ====
Most of the descriptions of Lady Sarah Wilson's costume were published in fashion rather than news perioodicals, unlike the descriptions of politically important people.
* "(Mme. de Pompadour), blue and magenta, silk, lace, and pink roses; bunch of wild hyacinths, yellow daisies, and pink roses on left shoulder."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 40, Col. 2b}}
* The ''Queen'' has 2 descriptions, this one which is included in the descriptions of the "general company" and the one below, highlighting the dressmaker, Mrs Mason:<blockquote>Lady Sarah Wilson wore a Pompadour costume of rich china-blue satin, the quaint bodice with deep point in front, fastened with old-fashioned bows of vieux-rose silk, graduating in size to the waist; the tight satin sleeves had deep frills of silk, pinked at the edged at the elbow with an inner frill of lace; the dress was trimmed with white blonde lace and pink Banksia roses; the skirt was of blue satin, with very full paniers, and flounced with two frills, edged with blonde lace and pink button roses.<ref>“Dresses Worn at the Duchess of Devonshire’s Fancy Ball on July 2.” The ''Queen'', The Lady’s Newspaper 10 July 1897, Saturday: 50 [of 98 BNA; p. 76 on printed page], full page [3 of 3 cols.]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0002627/18970710/171/0050.</ref>{{rp|Col. 2b}}</blockquote>
* The description accompanying the line drawing in the ''Queen'' says the original was owned by Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild, which means that Boucher's blue-dress portrait (above right) is the original:<blockquote>Made by Mrs Mason, 4, New Burlington Street, W. … No. 17. L<small>ADY</small> S<small>ARAH</small> W<small>ILSON</small>, Madame de Pompadour (copied from the picture of “La Pompadour” of Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild). — Rich / blue satin, with ruchings of satin and white blonde lace, with wreath of roses; Alençon lace ruffles; headdress, small wreath of roses, with high aigrette.<ref name=":8" />{{rp|Col. 2–3c}}</blockquote>
==== Commentary on Lady Sarah's Costume ====
These descriptions are based on the Thomson portrait published in the commemorative album (above left).
* Lady Sarah is holding her skirt in her left hand oddly, making the layers of the skirt confusing but suggesting that the overskirt has no trim other than what is at the opening.
* The dresses in the Boucher portraits are very similar to each other, but the blue 1856 one is the original for Lady Sarah's dress.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://lafayette.org.uk/wil1366.html|title=Lady Sarah Wilson at the Devonshire House Ball 1897, by Lafayette|website=lafayette.org.uk|access-date=2026-05-13}}</ref>
* The skirts in the Boucher portraits are voluminous, unlike the skirt Lady Sarah is wearing, which may be influenced by 1890s style, whose close-fitted skirts had a smooth, bell-shaped flare.<ref>Matthews, Mimi. A Victorian Lady's Guide to Fashion and Beauty. Pen & Sword History, 2018.</ref> (73) She may be wearing paniers (or a bum-roll), but like the skirt they are more modest than what Madame de Pompadour is wearing in the Boucher portraits. Or perhaps the modesty in Lady Sarah's costume means that it was less expensive? Or that she, appropriately, did not want to compete with the opulence of the costume of Daisy, Countess Warwick as Marie Antoinette?
* In some respects, this costume is an 18th-century design: the graduated bows in the bodice, the multiple layers of ruffled lace in the sleeves, the overskirt and petticoat construction, the v-point below the waist of the bodice, the double-ruffle and flower trim on the skirt and bodice and the piled-up powdered hair with ringlets. The design has 18th-century elements, but the line of the skirt is not 18th or 19th century.
* According to the ''Queen'', the roses on Lady Sarah's dress were Banksia roses, ''Rosa banksiae'', which have more, frillier petals than the long-stemmed roses we're accustomed to seeing, and they grow in clusters on short stems on longer trailing stems.
* As in the Pompadour portraits, Lady Sarah is accompanied by a small dog.
* row of bows on the bodice, eschelles
* corsage
[[File:Gordon-Chesney-Wilson-as-a-Captain-in-the-Blues-1680.jpg|thumb|alt=Black-and-white photograph of a standing man richly dressed in an historical costume|Gordon Chesney Wilson as a Captain in the Blues, 1680. ©National Portrait Gallery, London.]]
=== Captain Gordon Wilson ===
According to the typographical visualization of the quadrilles and processions in the ''Morning Post'', Captain Gordon Wilson was one of the Mousquetaires et Militaires de l'Epoque in the Louis XV and Louis XVI Quadrille, along with Sir Samuel Scott.<ref name=":3">"Fancy Dress Ball at Devonshire House." ''Morning Post'' Saturday 3 July 1897: 7 [of 12], Col. 4a–8 Col. 2b. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000174/18970703/054/0007.</ref>{{rp|7, Col. 6b}} The newspapers, however, say he was in costume as a member of the Royal Horse Guard of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2023-12-03|title=John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Churchill,_1st_Duke_of_Marlborough&oldid=1188192102|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Churchill,_1st_Duke_of_Marlborough.</ref>).
Lafayette's portrait of "Gordon Chesney Wilson as a Captain in the Blues, 1680" in costume is photogravure #158 in the album presented to the Duchess of Devonshire and now in the National Portrait Gallery.<ref name=":1" /> The printing on the portrait says, "Captain Gordon Wilson as a Captain in the Blues temp 1680."<ref>"Captain Gordon Wilson as a Captain in the Blues." ''Diamond Jubilee Fancy Dress Ball''. National Portrait Gallery https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw158521/Gordon-Chesney-Wilson-as-a-Captain-in-the-Blues-1680.</ref>
The Blues were the Royal Regiment of Horse Guards, part of the Household Cavalry: the coat was blue, with red facings, collar and plumes.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2021-11-11|title=Royal Horse Guards|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Royal_Horse_Guards&oldid=1054735721|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Horse_Guards.</ref>
==== Newspaper Descriptions of His Costume ====
*He wore a "Costume of his own regiment at the time of the Duke of Marlborough, blue with red facings, embroidered gold crimson sash, and embroidered baldric, large velvet hat and plumes."<ref name=":3" />{{rp|p. 8, Col. 1c}}
*"Sir Samuel Scott and Captain Gordon Wilson [wore] uniforms of the R.H.G. in the great Duke of Marlborough's time."<ref>“Girls’ Gossip.” ''Truth'' 8 July 1897, Thursday: 41 [of 70], Col. 1b – 42, Col. 2c. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0002961/18970708/089/0041.</ref>{{rp|42, Col. 2b}}
*"Captain Gordon Wilson and Sir Samuel Scott (costume of their own regiments at the time of the Duke of Marlborough), blue with red facings; velvet hat and plumes."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 36, Col. 3b}}
=== Wilfred Wilson ===
Wilfred Wilson was among the Suite of Men in the "Oriental" procession.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4">"Ball at Devonshire House." The ''Times'' Saturday 3 July 1897: 12, Cols. 1a–4c ''The Times Digital Archive''. Web. 28 Nov. 2015.</ref> The ''Gentlewoman'' says, "Messrs [[Social Victorians/People/Halifax|Gordon Wood]] and Wilfred Wilson were attendants on [<nowiki/>[[Social Victorians/People/Keppel|George Keppel]]'s] King Solomon," wearing "green silk tunics elaborately embroidered in gold and studs, with cloaks embroidered and lined with white; jewelled headdresses, swords."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 34, Col. 3a}} No photograph of him in costume can be found at this time.
=== Clarence Wilson ===
Mr. Clarence Wilson, likely Chesney Clarence Wilson?, was dressed as Buffone in the Venetians procession.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" />
* "Mr. Clarence Wilson (jester), in satin, with gold thread embroidery."<ref name=":6">“The Duchess of Devonshire’s Ball.” The ''Gentlewoman'' 10 July 1897 Saturday: 32–42 [of 76], Cols. 1a–3c [of 3]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0003340/18970710/155/0032. Print p. 50, Col. 3a.</ref>{{rp|p. 34, Col. 1b}}
=== Herbert Wilson ===
Mr. Herbert Wilson was dressed as Antonio Priali<ref name=":3" /> (misspelled as Briali<ref name=":4" /><ref>“Ball at Devonshire House.” Evening ''Mail'' 05 July 1897 Monday: 8 [of 8], Col. 1a–4c [of 6]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0003187/18970705/070/0008.</ref>{{rp|p. 8, Col. 1c}}) in the Venetians procession.
* "Mr. Herbert Wilson (Venetian noble), vieux rose brocaded velvet."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 34, Col. 1b}}
=== Wilsons Who Attended by Family ===
==== Lady Sarah and Captain Gordon Wilson Family ====
* Lady Sarah Wilson and Captain Gordon Wilson
* Mr. Wilfred Wilson
* Mr. Clarence Wilson
* Mr. Herbert Wilson
==== [[Social Victorians/People/Arthur Stanley Wilson|Arthur Stanley and Mary Wilson Family]] ====
* Arthur and Mary Wilson
* Clive Wilson
* Tottie (Susannah West) Wilson Menzies and Jack Graham Menzies
* [[Social Victorians/People/Muriel Wilson|Muriel Wilson]]
* Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henry Wilson
* Enid Wilson
==== Unknown Family ====
* Mr. T.W. Wilson
== Demographics ==
*Nationality: she, English<ref name=":0" />; he, Australian
*Samuel Wilson, born in Ireland, his wife and many of children born in Australia<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|date=2020-03-15|title=Samuel Wilson (Portsmouth MP)|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Samuel_Wilson_(Portsmouth_MP)&oldid=945720739|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}}</ref>
=== Residences ===
==== Sir Samuel Wilson ====
* After returning from Australia
* 9 Grosvenor Square, London (March 1895 – 11 June 1895)<ref name=":2" />
* Hughenden Manor, High Wycombe, Bucks (1881– September 1893?)<ref name=":2" />
== Family ==
=== Gordon Chesney Wilson's Family ===
* Sir Samuel Wilson (7<ref name=":2" /> or 17<ref name=":9">Ancestry.com. ''UK and Ireland, Find a Grave® Index, 1300s-Current'' [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.</ref> February 1832 – 11 June 1895)<ref name=":5" />
* Jeanne Campbell, Lady Wilson (8 May 1841 – 8 February 1925)<ref name=":9" />
*# '''Gordon Chesney Wilson''' (1 August 1865 – 6 November 1914)
*# Mary Wilson (c. 1870 –<ref name=":10">''Census Returns of England and Wales, 1901''. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives, 1901. Class: ''RG13''; Piece: ''82''; Folio: ''199''; Page: ''49''.</ref> )
*# '''Wilfred Wilson''' (3 March 1872 – February 1901<ref>"Man and Matters." ''Globe'' 26 February 1901 Tuesday: 3 [of 10], Col. 1c [of 5]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001652/19010226/030/0003.</ref>)
*# '''Clarence Chesney Wilson''' (2 March 1873 – )
*# Bertie (Herbert Hayden) Wilson (4 February 1875 – )
*# Adeline Constance Wilson Lloyd (c. 1867<ref>''Census Returns of England and Wales, 1901''. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives, 1901. Class: ''RG13''; Piece: ''82''; Folio: ''198''; Page: ''48''.</ref>– 24 October 1933<ref>Principal Probate Registry; London, England; ''Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England''. Ancestry.com. ''England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1995'' [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.</ref>)
*# Maud Margaret Wilson (1870<ref name=":11">The National Archives of the UK (TNA); Kew, Surrey, England; ''Census Returns of England and Wales, 1891''; Class: ''RG12''; Piece: ''68''; Folio: ''21''; Page: ''38''; GSU roll: ''6095178''.</ref>– ) [Maud, Countess Huntington?<ref name=":10" />]
*# Florence Mabel Wilson ()
*# Herbert H. Wilson (1878<ref name=":11" />–) [see Bertie, above]
*Sarah Isabella Augusta [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Spencer-Churchill]] Wilson (4 July 1865 – 22 October 1929)
*Gordon Chesney Wilson (1 August 1865 – 6 November 1914)<ref>"Lt.-Col. Gordon Chesney Wilson." {{Cite web|url=https://www.thepeerage.com/p10633.htm#i106327|title=Person Page|website=www.thepeerage.com|access-date=2020-10-20}}</ref>
#Randolph Gordon Wilson (1893–1956)<ref name=":0" />
=== Relations ===
* Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill's brothers were [[Social Victorians/People/Churchill|Lord Randolph Churchill]] and Sunny (Charles Richard John) Spencer-Churchill, [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough|9th Duke of Marlborough]] (9 November 1892 – 30 June 1934).
== Also Known As ==
*Family name: Wilson
*Sarah Isabella Augusta [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Spencer-Churchill]]
*Captain Gordon Wilson, M.V.O.
*Lady Sarah Wilson
*The family of [[Social Victorians/People/Arthur Stanley Wilson|Arthur Stanley Wilson]]
== Questions and Notes ==
#Lady Sarah Wilson is the 11th child and 6th daughter of John Winston Spencer-Churchill, 7th [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Duke of Marlborough]] and Frances Anne Emily Vane Spencer-Churchill, [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Duchess of Marlborough]].
#Lady Sarah Wilson is one of the "aristocratic lady journalists" and was at Mafeking with her husband, Capt. Gordon Wilson.
#Gordon Chesney Wilson died in at the first battle of Ypres, 6ths November 1914.
#For the Samuel Wilson family, any Miss Wilson after 1892 has to have been Florence Mabel Wilson.
#Three somewhat difficult-to-identify men were among the Suite of Men in the "Oriental" procession: [[Social Victorians/People/Halifax|Gordon Wood]], [[Social Victorians/People/Portman|Arthur B. Portman]], Wilfred Wilson, and [[Social Victorians/People/Bourke|Hon. Algernon Bourke]]. The identification of Gordon Wood and Wilfred Wilson is high because of contemporary newspaper accounts; the Hon. Algernon Bourke is not difficult to identify at all; Arthur Portman appears in a number of similar newspaper accounts, but none of them mentions his family of origin.
#There is a problem with Herbert Hayden Wilson and Herbert H. Wilson's birth dates.
#Captain Gordon Wilson is #96 on the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball#List of People Who Attended|list of people who attended]] the[[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball | Duchess of Devonshire's fancy-dress ball]] at Devonshire House; Lady Sarah Wilson is #392; Wilfred Wilson is #232; Mr. Clarence Wilson is #300; Mr. Herbert Wilson is #307.
== Footnotes ==
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== Overview ==
== Acquaintances, Friends and Enemies ==
== Organizations ==
=== Lady Sarah Wilson ===
*"[[Social Victorians/People/Working in Publishing#Journalists|aristocratic lady journalist]]"
*Lady Sarah Wilson, journalist for the ''Daily Mail''<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|date=2020-07-06|title=Sarah Wilson (war correspondent)|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sarah_Wilson_(war_correspondent)&oldid=966295858|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}}</ref>
=== Gordon Wilson ===
*Gordon Wilson, Royal Horse Guards
*Gordon Wilson, Robert Baden-Powell's aide de camp at Mafeking
=== Wilfred Wilson ===
* 5th Battalion Imperial Yeomanry
== Timeline ==
'''1861''', Sir Samuel Wilson and Jeanne Campbell married.<ref name=":2">"Sir Samuel Wilson." {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KDw6AQAAMAAJ|title=Armorial Families: A Complete Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage, and a Directory of Some Gentlemen of Coat-armour, and Being the First Attempt to Show which Arms in Use at the Moment are Borne by Legal Authority|last=Fox-Davies|first=Arthur Charles|date=1895|publisher=Jack|language=en}} 1047, Col. 1a.</ref>
'''1891 November 21''', Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill and Gordon Chesney Wilson married.<ref>"Lady Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill." {{Cite web|url=https://www.thepeerage.com/p10633.htm#i106326|title=Person Page|website=www.thepeerage.com|access-date=2020-10-20}}</ref>
'''1892 June 11''', Adeline Constance Wilson and Right Hon. the Earl of Huntingdon married.<ref name=":2" />
'''1897 July 2, Friday''', Lady Sarah Wilson and Captain Gordon Wilson attended the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball | Duchess of Devonshire's fancy-dress ball]] at Devonshire House, as did Mr. Wilfred Wilson, Mr. Clarence Wilson, and Mr. Herbert Wilson.
[[File:Madame de Pompadour.jpg|alt=Old painting of a woman in a very ornate dress with an open book|thumb|Madame de Pompadour, 1756, ]]
== Costume at the Duchess of Devonshire's 2 July 1897 Fancy-dress Ball ==
=== Lady Sarah Wilson ===
[[File:Lady-Sarah-Isabella-Augusta-Wilson-ne-Spencer-Churchill-as-Madame-de-Pompadour.jpg|thumb|left|alt=Black-and-white photograph of a standing woman richly dressed in an historical costume with a dog|Lady Sarah Wilson as Madame de Pompadour. ©National Portrait Gallery, London.]]
At the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball | Duchess of Devonshire's fancy-dress ball]], Lady Sarah Wilson went as Madame de Pompadour.<ref>"Duchess of Devonshire's Fancy Ball. A Brilliant Spectacle. Some of the Dresses." London ''Daily News'' Saturday 3 July 1897: 5 [of 10], Col. 6a–6, Col. 1b. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000051/18970703/024/0005 and https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0000051/18970703/024/0006.</ref>{{rp|p. 5, Col. 7c}}
John Thomson's portrait (left) of "Lady Sarah Isabella Augusta Wilson (née Spencer-Churchill) as Madame de Pompadour" in costume is photogravure #157 in the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball/Photographs#The Album of Photographs|album]] presented to the Duchess of Devonshire and now in the National Portrait Gallery.<ref name=":1">"Devonshire House Fancy Dress Ball (1897): photogravures by Walker & Boutall after various photographers." 1899. National Portrait Gallery https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait-list.php?set=515.</ref> The printing on the portrait says, "Lady Sarah Wilson as Madame de Pompadour."<ref>"Lady Sarah Wilson as Madame de Pompadour." ''Diamond Jubilee Fancy Dress Ball''. National Portrait Gallery https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw158520/Lady-Sarah-Isabella-Augusta-Wilson-ne-Spencer-Churchill-as-Madame-de-Pompadour.</ref>
If Lady Sarah Wilson's dress is indeed blue, as the descriptions say, then Thomson's portrait is an excellent example of how difficult it can be to guess the colors of things in black-and-white photographs. Although the album (and the National Portrait Gallery, London) credit Thomson for the photograph, the portrait of Lady Sarah from the album looks more like a painting than a photograph. Perhaps it was retouched to make it look less photographic and more painterly.
Surprisingly, two portraits of Lady Sarah appear in the Lafayette Archive, suggesting that she also had her photograph taken by the Lafayette firm, perhaps at the ball itself. The Lafayette Archive lists 2 photographs but provides only one:
* http://lafayette.org.uk/wil1366.html
This image is a higher resolution and more clear, and it is not retouched to appear more like a painted portrait. Not all particulars of her costume are identical in the Lafayette and Thomson portraits.
Another image of Lady Sarah Wilson in costume appeared in the ''Queen'' (bottom middle of the page, the numeral 17 below the line drawing, seated, facing slightly to her right, the drawing shows a dress similar to her costume in her photograph, bows and ruffles emphasized; the drawing apparently signed by “Rook”).<ref name=":8">“Dresses Worn at the Duchess of Devonshire’s Fancy Ball on July 2.” The ''Queen'', The Lady’s Newspaper 10 July 1897, Saturday: 52 [of 98 BNA; p. 78 on printed page], full page [3 of 3 cols.]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0002627/18970710/174/0052.</ref>{{rp|Col. 2b–c}}
François Boucher's 1756 portrait of Madame de Pompadour (above right) shows Jeanne Antoinette Poisson, Madame de Pompadour at about 35 years old.<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|date=2023-12-13|title=Madame de Pompadour|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Madame_de_Pompadour&oldid=1189755757|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madame_de_Pompadour.</ref> Lady Sarah Wilson was nearly 32 years old at the time of the ball. (The color of the dress in this image may not be true to the painting; a different copy shows it looking bluer.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2023-12-13|title=Madame de Pompadour|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Madame_de_Pompadour&oldid=1189755757|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madame_de_Pompadour#/media/File:Madame_de_Pompadour.jpg</ref>)
[[File:François Boucher - Portrait of Marquise de Pompadour - WGA02909.jpg|thumb|Madame de Pompadour, Boucher, 1759, with Friendship's consolation of Love behind her]]
Another Boucher portrait of Madame de Pompadour (right), painted in 1759 when she was 38,<ref name=":7" /> shows her in a very similar dress, though pink and yellow rather than blue or blue-green. We can see how the skirt falls when she is standing.
==== Madame de Pompadour ====
Politically active, Madame de Pompadour was Louis XV's official chief mistress until 1751 and lady in waiting to the Queen, Polish Marie Leszczyńska.<ref name=":7" /> She was leader of fashionable society until Louis XV's death and Marie Antoinette's rise displaced her.
==== Newspaper Accounts ====
Most of the descriptions of Lady Sarah Wilson's costume were published in fashion rather than news perioodicals, unlike the descriptions of politically important people.
* "(Mme. de Pompadour), blue and magenta, silk, lace, and pink roses; bunch of wild hyacinths, yellow daisies, and pink roses on left shoulder."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 40, Col. 2b}}
* The ''Queen'' has 2 descriptions, this one which is included in the descriptions of the "general company" and the one below, highlighting the dressmaker, Mrs Mason:<blockquote>Lady Sarah Wilson wore a Pompadour costume of rich china-blue satin, the quaint bodice with deep point in front, fastened with old-fashioned bows of vieux-rose silk, graduating in size to the waist; the tight satin sleeves had deep frills of silk, pinked at the edged at the elbow with an inner frill of lace; the dress was trimmed with white blonde lace and pink Banksia roses; the skirt was of blue satin, with very full paniers, and flounced with two frills, edged with blonde lace and pink button roses.<ref>“Dresses Worn at the Duchess of Devonshire’s Fancy Ball on July 2.” The ''Queen'', The Lady’s Newspaper 10 July 1897, Saturday: 50 [of 98 BNA; p. 76 on printed page], full page [3 of 3 cols.]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0002627/18970710/171/0050.</ref>{{rp|Col. 2b}}</blockquote>
* The description accompanying the line drawing in the ''Queen'' says the original was owned by Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild, which means that Boucher's blue-dress portrait (above right) is the original:<blockquote>Made by Mrs Mason, 4, New Burlington Street, W. … No. 17. L<small>ADY</small> S<small>ARAH</small> W<small>ILSON</small>, Madame de Pompadour (copied from the picture of “La Pompadour” of Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild). — Rich / blue satin, with ruchings of satin and white blonde lace, with wreath of roses; Alençon lace ruffles; headdress, small wreath of roses, with high aigrette.<ref name=":8" />{{rp|Col. 2–3c}}</blockquote>
==== Commentary on Lady Sarah's Costume ====
These descriptions are based on the Thomson portrait published in the commemorative album (above left).
* Lady Sarah is holding her skirt in her left hand oddly, making the layers of the skirt confusing but suggesting that the overskirt has no trim other than what is at the opening.
* The dresses in the Boucher portraits are very similar to each other, but the blue 1856 one is the original for Lady Sarah's dress.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://lafayette.org.uk/wil1366.html|title=Lady Sarah Wilson at the Devonshire House Ball 1897, by Lafayette|website=lafayette.org.uk|access-date=2026-05-13}}</ref>
* The skirts in the Boucher portraits are voluminous, unlike the skirt Lady Sarah is wearing, which may be influenced by 1890s style, whose close-fitted skirts had a smooth, bell-shaped flare.<ref>Matthews, Mimi. A Victorian Lady's Guide to Fashion and Beauty. Pen & Sword History, 2018.</ref>{{rp|73}} She may be wearing paniers (or a bum-roll), but like the skirt they are more modest than what Madame de Pompadour is wearing in the Boucher portraits. Or perhaps the modesty in Lady Sarah's costume means that it was less expensive? Or that she, appropriately, did not want to compete with the opulence of the costume of Daisy, Countess Warwick as Marie Antoinette?
* In some respects, this costume is an 18th-century design: the graduated bows in the bodice, the multiple layers of ruffled lace in the sleeves, the overskirt and petticoat construction, the v-point below the waist of the bodice, the double-ruffle and flower trim on the skirt and bodice and the piled-up powdered hair with ringlets. The design has 18th-century elements, but the line of the skirt is not 18th or 19th century.
* According to the ''Queen'', the roses on Lady Sarah's dress were Banksia roses, ''Rosa banksiae'', which have more, frillier petals than the long-stemmed roses we're accustomed to seeing, and they grow in clusters on short stems on longer trailing stems.
* As in the Pompadour portraits, Lady Sarah is accompanied by a small dog.
* row of bows on the bodice, eschelles
* corsage
[[File:Gordon-Chesney-Wilson-as-a-Captain-in-the-Blues-1680.jpg|thumb|alt=Black-and-white photograph of a standing man richly dressed in an historical costume|Gordon Chesney Wilson as a Captain in the Blues, 1680. ©National Portrait Gallery, London.]]
=== Captain Gordon Wilson ===
According to the typographical visualization of the quadrilles and processions in the ''Morning Post'', Captain Gordon Wilson was one of the Mousquetaires et Militaires de l'Epoque in the Louis XV and Louis XVI Quadrille, along with Sir Samuel Scott.<ref name=":3">"Fancy Dress Ball at Devonshire House." ''Morning Post'' Saturday 3 July 1897: 7 [of 12], Col. 4a–8 Col. 2b. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000174/18970703/054/0007.</ref>{{rp|7, Col. 6b}} The newspapers, however, say he was in costume as a member of the Royal Horse Guard of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2023-12-03|title=John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Churchill,_1st_Duke_of_Marlborough&oldid=1188192102|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Churchill,_1st_Duke_of_Marlborough.</ref>).
Lafayette's portrait of "Gordon Chesney Wilson as a Captain in the Blues, 1680" in costume is photogravure #158 in the album presented to the Duchess of Devonshire and now in the National Portrait Gallery.<ref name=":1" /> The printing on the portrait says, "Captain Gordon Wilson as a Captain in the Blues temp 1680."<ref>"Captain Gordon Wilson as a Captain in the Blues." ''Diamond Jubilee Fancy Dress Ball''. National Portrait Gallery https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw158521/Gordon-Chesney-Wilson-as-a-Captain-in-the-Blues-1680.</ref>
The Blues were the Royal Regiment of Horse Guards, part of the Household Cavalry: the coat was blue, with red facings, collar and plumes.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2021-11-11|title=Royal Horse Guards|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Royal_Horse_Guards&oldid=1054735721|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Horse_Guards.</ref>
==== Newspaper Descriptions of His Costume ====
*He wore a "Costume of his own regiment at the time of the Duke of Marlborough, blue with red facings, embroidered gold crimson sash, and embroidered baldric, large velvet hat and plumes."<ref name=":3" />{{rp|p. 8, Col. 1c}}
*"Sir Samuel Scott and Captain Gordon Wilson [wore] uniforms of the R.H.G. in the great Duke of Marlborough's time."<ref>“Girls’ Gossip.” ''Truth'' 8 July 1897, Thursday: 41 [of 70], Col. 1b – 42, Col. 2c. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0002961/18970708/089/0041.</ref>{{rp|42, Col. 2b}}
*"Captain Gordon Wilson and Sir Samuel Scott (costume of their own regiments at the time of the Duke of Marlborough), blue with red facings; velvet hat and plumes."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 36, Col. 3b}}
=== Wilfred Wilson ===
Wilfred Wilson was among the Suite of Men in the "Oriental" procession.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4">"Ball at Devonshire House." The ''Times'' Saturday 3 July 1897: 12, Cols. 1a–4c ''The Times Digital Archive''. Web. 28 Nov. 2015.</ref> The ''Gentlewoman'' says, "Messrs [[Social Victorians/People/Halifax|Gordon Wood]] and Wilfred Wilson were attendants on [<nowiki/>[[Social Victorians/People/Keppel|George Keppel]]'s] King Solomon," wearing "green silk tunics elaborately embroidered in gold and studs, with cloaks embroidered and lined with white; jewelled headdresses, swords."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 34, Col. 3a}} No photograph of him in costume can be found at this time.
=== Clarence Wilson ===
Mr. Clarence Wilson, likely Chesney Clarence Wilson?, was dressed as Buffone in the Venetians procession.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" />
* "Mr. Clarence Wilson (jester), in satin, with gold thread embroidery."<ref name=":6">“The Duchess of Devonshire’s Ball.” The ''Gentlewoman'' 10 July 1897 Saturday: 32–42 [of 76], Cols. 1a–3c [of 3]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0003340/18970710/155/0032. Print p. 50, Col. 3a.</ref>{{rp|p. 34, Col. 1b}}
=== Herbert Wilson ===
Mr. Herbert Wilson was dressed as Antonio Priali<ref name=":3" /> (misspelled as Briali<ref name=":4" /><ref>“Ball at Devonshire House.” Evening ''Mail'' 05 July 1897 Monday: 8 [of 8], Col. 1a–4c [of 6]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0003187/18970705/070/0008.</ref>{{rp|p. 8, Col. 1c}}) in the Venetians procession.
* "Mr. Herbert Wilson (Venetian noble), vieux rose brocaded velvet."<ref name=":6" />{{rp|p. 34, Col. 1b}}
=== Wilsons Who Attended by Family ===
==== Lady Sarah and Captain Gordon Wilson Family ====
* Lady Sarah Wilson and Captain Gordon Wilson
* Mr. Wilfred Wilson
* Mr. Clarence Wilson
* Mr. Herbert Wilson
==== [[Social Victorians/People/Arthur Stanley Wilson|Arthur Stanley and Mary Wilson Family]] ====
* Arthur and Mary Wilson
* Clive Wilson
* Tottie (Susannah West) Wilson Menzies and Jack Graham Menzies
* [[Social Victorians/People/Muriel Wilson|Muriel Wilson]]
* Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henry Wilson
* Enid Wilson
==== Unknown Family ====
* Mr. T.W. Wilson
== Demographics ==
*Nationality: she, English<ref name=":0" />; he, Australian
*Samuel Wilson, born in Ireland, his wife and many of children born in Australia<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|date=2020-03-15|title=Samuel Wilson (Portsmouth MP)|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Samuel_Wilson_(Portsmouth_MP)&oldid=945720739|journal=Wikipedia|language=en}}</ref>
=== Residences ===
==== Sir Samuel Wilson ====
* After returning from Australia
* 9 Grosvenor Square, London (March 1895 – 11 June 1895)<ref name=":2" />
* Hughenden Manor, High Wycombe, Bucks (1881– September 1893?)<ref name=":2" />
== Family ==
=== Gordon Chesney Wilson's Family ===
* Sir Samuel Wilson (7<ref name=":2" /> or 17<ref name=":9">Ancestry.com. ''UK and Ireland, Find a Grave® Index, 1300s-Current'' [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.</ref> February 1832 – 11 June 1895)<ref name=":5" />
* Jeanne Campbell, Lady Wilson (8 May 1841 – 8 February 1925)<ref name=":9" />
*# '''Gordon Chesney Wilson''' (1 August 1865 – 6 November 1914)
*# Mary Wilson (c. 1870 –<ref name=":10">''Census Returns of England and Wales, 1901''. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives, 1901. Class: ''RG13''; Piece: ''82''; Folio: ''199''; Page: ''49''.</ref> )
*# '''Wilfred Wilson''' (3 March 1872 – February 1901<ref>"Man and Matters." ''Globe'' 26 February 1901 Tuesday: 3 [of 10], Col. 1c [of 5]. ''British Newspaper Archive'' https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001652/19010226/030/0003.</ref>)
*# '''Clarence Chesney Wilson''' (2 March 1873 – )
*# Bertie (Herbert Hayden) Wilson (4 February 1875 – )
*# Adeline Constance Wilson Lloyd (c. 1867<ref>''Census Returns of England and Wales, 1901''. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives, 1901. Class: ''RG13''; Piece: ''82''; Folio: ''198''; Page: ''48''.</ref>– 24 October 1933<ref>Principal Probate Registry; London, England; ''Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England''. Ancestry.com. ''England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1995'' [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.</ref>)
*# Maud Margaret Wilson (1870<ref name=":11">The National Archives of the UK (TNA); Kew, Surrey, England; ''Census Returns of England and Wales, 1891''; Class: ''RG12''; Piece: ''68''; Folio: ''21''; Page: ''38''; GSU roll: ''6095178''.</ref>– ) [Maud, Countess Huntington?<ref name=":10" />]
*# Florence Mabel Wilson ()
*# Herbert H. Wilson (1878<ref name=":11" />–) [see Bertie, above]
*Sarah Isabella Augusta [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Spencer-Churchill]] Wilson (4 July 1865 – 22 October 1929)
*Gordon Chesney Wilson (1 August 1865 – 6 November 1914)<ref>"Lt.-Col. Gordon Chesney Wilson." {{Cite web|url=https://www.thepeerage.com/p10633.htm#i106327|title=Person Page|website=www.thepeerage.com|access-date=2020-10-20}}</ref>
#Randolph Gordon Wilson (1893–1956)<ref name=":0" />
=== Relations ===
* Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill's brothers were [[Social Victorians/People/Churchill|Lord Randolph Churchill]] and Sunny (Charles Richard John) Spencer-Churchill, [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough|9th Duke of Marlborough]] (9 November 1892 – 30 June 1934).
== Also Known As ==
*Family name: Wilson
*Sarah Isabella Augusta [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Spencer-Churchill]]
*Captain Gordon Wilson, M.V.O.
*Lady Sarah Wilson
*The family of [[Social Victorians/People/Arthur Stanley Wilson|Arthur Stanley Wilson]]
== Questions and Notes ==
#Lady Sarah Wilson is the 11th child and 6th daughter of John Winston Spencer-Churchill, 7th [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Duke of Marlborough]] and Frances Anne Emily Vane Spencer-Churchill, [[Social Victorians/People/Marlborough | Duchess of Marlborough]].
#Lady Sarah Wilson is one of the "aristocratic lady journalists" and was at Mafeking with her husband, Capt. Gordon Wilson.
#Gordon Chesney Wilson died in at the first battle of Ypres, 6ths November 1914.
#For the Samuel Wilson family, any Miss Wilson after 1892 has to have been Florence Mabel Wilson.
#Three somewhat difficult-to-identify men were among the Suite of Men in the "Oriental" procession: [[Social Victorians/People/Halifax|Gordon Wood]], [[Social Victorians/People/Portman|Arthur B. Portman]], Wilfred Wilson, and [[Social Victorians/People/Bourke|Hon. Algernon Bourke]]. The identification of Gordon Wood and Wilfred Wilson is high because of contemporary newspaper accounts; the Hon. Algernon Bourke is not difficult to identify at all; Arthur Portman appears in a number of similar newspaper accounts, but none of them mentions his family of origin.
#There is a problem with Herbert Hayden Wilson and Herbert H. Wilson's birth dates.
#Captain Gordon Wilson is #96 on the [[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball#List of People Who Attended|list of people who attended]] the[[Social Victorians/1897 Fancy Dress Ball | Duchess of Devonshire's fancy-dress ball]] at Devonshire House; Lady Sarah Wilson is #392; Wilfred Wilson is #232; Mr. Clarence Wilson is #300; Mr. Herbert Wilson is #307.
== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}
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= '''' The John Snow Research Institute -2026'''' =
Billions are at increased risk of developing metabolic syndromes with prediabetes, diabetes type 2, high blood pressure and overweight. All can lower their risks by staying physical active and eating well. For early identification of the risks we propose to register weight and height (Body Mass Index) and the fasting blood sugar in the '''Prevalence studies''' at the schools for seafarers, nurses, medical students and the kids schools.(not blood sugar).The 16-weeks '''intervention studies''' include learnings by short video sequences and self-monitoring of blood sugar with glucometer, and self-evaluation of diet and physical activity.[[File:Lifestyle Medicine Pillars.png|300px|right|The focus of Lifestyle Medicine is on these 6 pillars.]]
[[File:John Snow.jpg|thumb|John Snow in the early nineteenth century]]
[[File:Cholera in London 1866.gif|thumb|250px|Map of a later cholera outbreak in London, in 1866]] [[File:Choleramaplondon1866.png|thumb|right|250px|Legend for the map above]]
1. '<nowiki/>'''Prevalence studies''''
1.1 The-International-Maritime-Health-Database <ref>https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/z3cq5ciiev06y8v9duw7u/A-International-Maritime-Health-Database.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=pt0kdesvmagcxaa2wez3tmza3 </ref>
1.2 Nursing Students Health Database <ref> https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/tcznmmd2y3nona5e3h1ro/The-Nursing-students-health-database.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=onbjh4o8ko1lzdvgyi8nlrotk </ref>
1.3. Medical student's Health Database <ref>https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/f16h9b60u4gxgt56un2jf/The-Medical-students-Health-database.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=xyfqen5trdc5lniaovipl548n </ref>
1.4. School childrens Health database <ref> https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/u6u50c8bxwhte9t2t6ck8/The-School-children-s-Health-database.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=zlyz5wn673wf7owettq3nx3h5 </ref>
2. '''Intervention studies''' Englsh
<ref>https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/oi6cx6tlwwvoko3ed37tn/Invitation-to-the-course-English.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=7kzg91tqfgjskxf5aji8khicx </ref> Danish
<ref>https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/2qahc3q9hmf4skbvk77ab/Invitation-to-the-course-in-Danish.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=x63w8oqvarz284zg2btq2johv </ref> Spanish <ref> https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/bn71inqeeth4o4mc1fjth/Invitation-to-the-course-Spanish.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=popmr1fnodh1v951v9l7k9ezv </ref>
- General research protocol draft
<ref> https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/gau25oy5y1s57046icjt2/Research-protocol-draft.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=wat63e25ritmujwcpss8s4v0s </ref>
- Health Promoting Schools <ref> https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/0rm7honrezbjwrcy3h3yk/Health-promoting-schools.docx?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=673jyzcmwbfw7k9ui9nmtp0zh </ref>
- John Snow Institute bylaws <ref> https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/lccr7jtnga1u0x75117zn/John-Snow-revision-2-March-11.doc?cloud_editor=word&dl=0&rlkey=lz2gi7mslcoay5dzygg8h6n6r </ref>
3. '''Publications and pptx''' 2016-2026 <ref>https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Maritime_Health_Research_and_Education-NET/The_International_Type_2_Diabetes_Mellitus_and_Hypertension_Research_Group#The_John_Snow_Institute </ref><ref name=":0"> https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/mw7ft423lkkpjoxywd2bf </ref>
4. '''Strategies for research and implementation'''
For early identification of the risks we propose to register weight and height (Body Mass Index) and the fasting blood sugar in the '''Prevalence studies''' at the schools for seafarers, nurses, medical students and the kids schools.(no FPG).
A practical strategy for prediabetes remission in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) must assume that laboratory capacity, workforce, and financing are constrained:
https://www.dropbox.com/t/jOgRZQWEEzMTNiBR
'''5. Minutes from meetings''' <ref> https://www.dropbox.com/t/3ZfLGngkS3pSlAQ3 </ref>
'''Prediabetes-Remission Research Network:'''
<small>Prof. Ing. MSc. Nailet Delgado; Dr. Olaf Jensen, MD, MPH, PhD, o147248@gmail.com; MSc.Ph.D. Bishal Gyawali (SDU); MSc.PhD Vivi Just-Nørregaard; Dr. Johan Hviid Andersen MD, PhD. Prof Århus University; Prof. MSc. Agnes Flores, UMECIT, Panama; Dr. Maite, Vacamonte, Panama; Bruno Nørdam, Randers; Dr. Maite Duque, Venezuela; Dr. Indira Santos Panama; Med.Stud. Ashley Lezcano, Panama; Dr. Antonio Roberto Abaya MD Filippines; Dr. Jen Mendoza, MD, Filippines; Dr. Andra Ergle MD, Latvia; Prof. MSc. Ingrid Morató, Tarragona/Cadiz, Spain; MBA Christian Acheampong, Turkey; Dr. Alejandro Martinez, MPH, Costa Rica; Dr. Med. Sci Finn Gyntelberg; NFA.and Bispebj. Hosp. Denmark,</small>
==References==
[[Category:Prediabetes ]]
<references />Education 1: Research Methodology <ref>https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Maritime_Health_Research_and_Education-NET/EDUCATION/Education_module_links</ref>
<references />
= Online Meeting , May 11, 2026 =
For the continuity of the project: Reversing prediabetes is important.
Prediabetes – Remission in Small - and medium economy countries is the target.
Keeping eyes open for applications for lifestyle medicine, sporadic supplement metformin
Prepare documentation to apply for funding. Clearly define the project title, objectives, scope (countries, communities, ages), strategy (how to collect data, with what equipment, what variables), required materials, and required personnel.
Meeting with Lene Daugaard director SIMAC Svendborg to do a similar to Panama study.
Periodically search for organizations that could fund our project.
Apply for funding when the opportunity arises.
Obtain those funds.
In parallel, without interruption, continue data collection according to the current methodology with prevalence data, and a comparative study between countries can be conducted using this collected data.
Intervention study 16 weeks in one or two of the target populations.
Proposed budget for 5 years: 5 mill Dkr.
The first year can be to collect data from two other countries, Denmark and Turkey (Istanbul) compare with the data from Panama, UMIP including a short review study on similar data and an 16 week intervention study with the goal to produce a strategic model for prevalence and effectful intervention to be reported in 1-2 international articles.
PLEASE ADD THE MISSING POINTS.
Possible funding entities:
Innovation Fund Denmark
EIFO
DANIDA
CROWDFOUNDING
European Commission programs.
SKOV website
Lundbeckfonden
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/* Candidature for the New Vice-President for [2026, 2027] */
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----<nowiki>**</nowiki>Please ''login'' in Wikiversity and then use the ''<nowiki/>'edit''' button: your edition mode will be 'WYSIWYG'. Each Candidature with its manifesto can take inspiration from those for previous years.
''Decision of the 2025 General Assembly 27th April:''
''The 2026 elections are starting the 27th April, the date of the General Assembly:''
''(i) There will be an election for Vice-President starting the 27 April 2026.''
''(ii) To save time and effort - Instead of an election for 1/3 of the Executive Committee'' ''(EC) for 2025 we propose to keep the existing EC and invite members of the Council '''not on the EC''' to offer themselves as members of an enlarged Executive Committee. If less than six people propose themselves, they will be co-opted onto the Executive Committee. If more than six propose themselves we will hold an election for 1/3 EC.''
The deadline for your candidature is Saturday 16th May 2026 at 24:00 CET.
== Candidature for the New Vice-President for [2026, 2027] ==
'''Manifesto – Candidature for New Vice-President of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC'''
New Candidatures to the Executive Committee for [2026]
=== Manifesto – Candidature for the Executive Committee of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC ===
'''Flavia Mori SARTI, Ph.D., Professor and Researcher, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil'''
I present my interest in being candidate for the CS-DC Executive Committee to contribute to the dissemination of knowledge in complex systems at the local and global level. I am representative of the University of Sao Paulo (USP) at the CS-DC since 2012. I work with complex systems modeling since the creation of the Interdisciplinary Research Group of Complex Systems Modelling at the School of Arts, Sciences and Humanities (EACH-USP) in 2006. Our research group succesfully implemented the first interdisciplinary graduate program titled Master in Complex Systems Modeling in Brazil, in 2010. I have been participating in the program commission since 2010, and I was coordinator of the graduate program from 2010 to 2014.
I have supervised 12 students in the program and two postdoctoral fellows, followed by publication of several book chapters and papers on complex systems applied to public policies, including models on tax evasion, health systems regulation, health insurance, food policy and nutrition programs, and complex networks on scientific collaboration and global food trade. I have been invited to present seminars and talks on complex systems applied to food systems, health economics, and public policy.
My goals in the CS-DC Executive Committee include:
* To disseminate the role of CS-DC in education and research on complex systems, especially in developing countries;
* To support and to engage other research groups working with complex systems for participation in the CS-DC;
* To contribute further with management and organization of CS-DC activities during the period of 2022-2024;
* To continue supporting capacity building in complex systems through supervision and other academic activities;
* To foster innovation, research and development strategies through complex systems applications in public policy and entrepreneurship.
'''Alberto A. Rasia-Filho, MD, Ph.D, Professor and Researcher, Federal University of Health Sciences of Porto Alegre (UFCSPA) and Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil'''
Dear Councilors of the UNESCO CS-DC,
It is an honor to submit my candidacy for the CS-DC Executive Committee for 2026. Please let me introduce myself as a Full Professor of Physiology (UFCSPA), Supervisor in the Biosciences (UFCSPA) and Neuroscience Graduate Programs (UFRGS), and a researcher on human neuronal morphology, dendritic spines, synaptic plasticity, and social/emotional neural networks (National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, Brazil). Professional Identifier/ORCID: 0000-0003-4623-5916.
Currently, I am participating as head of the e-Team "Morphological Heterogeneity" in the UNESCO CS-DC, led by Prof. Enver Oruro Puma, Principal Investigator of the Morphodynamic Neuroscience and Behavior eLab CS-DC, and Prof. Grace E. Pardo, Scientific Research Institute, Continental University of Cusco, Peru. We integrate morphodynamics across different scales of brain organization and neural network functions in complex systems, considering neuronal morphology itself as an emergent level of organization. The structure of neural cells and their connectivity within the brain volume are morphodynamic features with interactions from cellular morphogenetic elements, the local cell neighborhood, and synaptic connections. In turn, the emergent functions of networks are organized around a series of conceptual, experimental, and computational foundations.
These ideas were developed—and are now open to additional discussions—in the recent article from our group: “New Directions for Complex Systems in Contemporary Neuroscience: A Morphodynamic and Emergent Function Approach” (Research Topic: Theoretical and Computational Insights into Brain-Based Cognition/Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience). This represents an ongoing research line available for further collaborations in Complex Systems Science.
I will be (1) committed to the Action Plan 2026 (and beyond) from the current 2026-31 Action Plan/Complex Systems Digital Campus UNESCO UniTwin, (2) working to integrate interdisciplinary approaches and eTeams, sharing knowledge and opportunities for complex systems education and research, as well as (3) contributing to country and continent engagement and representation in line with worldwide aims, (4) including the academic formation of young scientists.
----'''Norberto Garcia-Cairasco, BSc, MSc, PhD, Full Professor of Physiology-Neurophysiology, Ribeirão Preto School of Medicine, University of São Paulo (FMRP-USP), Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo State, Brazil.'''
Dear Councilors of the UNESCO CS-DC,
It is an honor for me to submit my candidacy for the CS-DC Executive Committee for 2026. Please, let me introduce myself as a Full Professor of Physiology-Neurophysiology, Ribeirão Preto School of Medicine, University of São Paulo (FMRP-USP), Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo State, Brazil. At FMRP-USP, I am Supervisor (Master and PhD) at both Graduate Programs in Physiology and Neurology/Neuroscience & Neuropsychiatry. I have been the Founder and the Director for almost 40 years of the Neurophysiology and Experimental Neuroethology Laboratory, where we conduct research in the characterization of epilepsies and associated neuropsychiatric comorbidities, using behavioral, electrophysiological, cellular, molecular and computational integrated tools, in both experimental and collaborative clinical settings. Our main funding comes from the State of São Paulo Foundation (FAPESP), the Federal agencies National Council for Research (CNPq) and the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES). Professional Identifier/ORCID: <nowiki>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8857-3775</nowiki>.
I am currently the Head of the e-Team “'''Epilepsy and Neuropsychiatric Comorbidities”''' in the UNESCO CS-DC, led by Prof. Enver Oruro and Prof. Grace E Pardo, Principal Investigators of the Neurocomputing, Social Simulation, and Complex Systems Laboratory at the Instituto Científico of Universidad Continental del Cusco, Peru.
Complex systems are involved in abnormal functioning and the refractoriness to pharmacological approaches of epileptogenic neural circuits, with additional multilevel complexity derived from associated, usually neuropsychiatric comorbidities. We, indeed, propose that the morphodynamics of neurons and glia in neural circuits can be studied as an initial step toward understanding proper wiring and stable properties, including neurotransmitters, neuromodulators, receptors, and intracellular signal transduction components, as well as plastic features, environmental stimuli, attention, and learning. These ideas were developed, and are now open to additional discussions, in the recent article from our group: “New Directions for Complex Systems in Contemporary Neuroscience: A Morphodynamic and Emergent Function Approach” (Research Topic: Theoretical and Computational Insights into Brain-Based Cognition/Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience). This represents an ongoing research line available for further collaborations in Complex Systems Science.
I will be (1) committed to the Action Plan 2026 (and beyond) from the current 2026-31 Action Plan/Complex Systems Digital Campus UNESCO UniTwin, (2) working to integrate interdisciplinary approaches and eTeams, sharing knowledge and opportunities for complex systems education and research, as well as (3) contributing to country and continent engagement and representation in line with worldwide aims, (4) including the academic formation of young scientists.
In addition to the above-mentioned agenda and goals, I will offer, for the leverage of outreach activities, my experience of more than four decades in the '''''Neuroscience & Arts''''' connection. In fact, I am co-Founder of the “Brain Awareness Week” in Brazil (since 2012) and currently the Coordinator at the Institute for Advanced Studies at USP-Ribeirão Preto of the “'''''Science, Arts, Education and Society Network - ScienArtES'''''”. In 2022, I received the Title of ''Doctor Honoris Causa'' (Biology) for the Universidad de Salamanca, Spain. Finally, I am also, since 2026, a Member of the Brain Literacy Initiative Alliance: Uniting for Brain Research-Informed Education Worldwide.
----
== Candidature for the New President for [2025, 2026] ==
'''Manifesto – Candidature for New President of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC'''
'''Prof. Paul Bourgine''' :
If elected, my main commitment is to create the conditions for a self-organized development of our UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC as autonomous communities of communities for our flagship TIMES and its Knowledge & Knowhow Accelerator one-for-all & all-for-one (KKA). We know now how to realize —for the two above commitments— the 3<sup>rd</sup> UNESCO commitment, i.e., the ‘computational ecosystem’. It will use the mature part of Web 3.0, especially the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS). Thanks to our previous efforts especially of the two last years, the remaining work amount is ten times less than we were anticipating at the beginning of the 2<sup>nd</sup> renewal of our UniTwin by UNESCO 2020-2026.
If elected, my duty will be not only to fulfill entirely the commitments of our Cooperation Program with UNESCO but also starting an exponential increasing development wave for our UniTwin network (through their continent and country Councils) and of our e-Campus (through CS-DC’25 and e-Labs’26 Conferences especially for our Flagships for sustainable development). The Knowledge & Knowhow Accelerator will directly benefit from 1) such conference series, 2) our past and new flagships for sustainable development and 3) a new decentralized strategy for collecting donations in our decentralized network of X-Legal Entities.
== New Candidatures to the Executive Committee for [2025] ==
=== Manifesto – Candidature for the Executive Committee of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC ===
'''Prof. Silvius STANCIU, PhD in Economics, PhD in Engineering, Habil.'''
Full Professor, “Dunărea de Jos” University of Galați (UDJG), Romania
Editor-in-Chief, ''Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development Studies (JARDS)''
Former Vice-Rector, Former Director of DFCTT and CTT UGAL
----'''Dear Councillors,'''
It is a great honor for me to submit my candidacy for the Executive Committee of the UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC). With more than '''30 years of experience in academia''', I am currently Full Professor and doctoral advisor at “Dunărea de Jos” University of Galați (UDJG), Romania — a public research university with a strong regional impact and a long-standing tradition in interdisciplinary education and innovation.
I hold two doctoral degrees — one in Economics and one in Engineering — and I am a habilitated professor. I have published '''163 ISI-indexed scientific articles''' and have a '''Clarivate H-index of 14'''. My research focuses on '''food security, circular economy, technological innovation, rural development''', and '''complex systems in agro-food value chains'''.
I am the founder and coordinator of Romania’s first doctoral program in ''Engineering and Management in Agriculture and Rural Development (IMADR)'', with '''9 PhD graduates''' and '''9 doctoral students''' currently under my supervision. I also serve as '''Editor-in-Chief''' of the ''Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development Studies (JARDS)'', dedicated to interdisciplinary research in sustainable food and rural systems.
Over the past decade, I have been involved as director or expert in '''more than 45 national and international research projects''', including Horizon-compatible initiatives and cross-border cooperation programs. I coordinated a '''Romania–Republic of Moldova cross-border project''' (2020–2021) and currently lead '''two new ROMD-funded projects''' entering implementation.
My former institutional leadership roles include:
* '''Vice-Rector for Research and Innovation'''
* '''Director of the Department for Institutional Development (DFCTT)''' and of the '''Technology Transfer Center (CTT UGAL)'''
* '''Member of national and international quality and research bodies''', including CNATDCU, ARACIS, and CMPTJ
----'''If elected, I am committed to:'''
* Expanding the CS-DC network in '''Eastern Europe and the Black Sea region''', enhancing scientific and territorial diversity;
* Supporting '''POEM''' and '''FOOD flagship programs''' through digital education, doctoral/postdoctoral collaboration, and innovation ecosystems;
* Promoting '''open science''', international e-seminars, and interdisciplinary MOOCs;
* Coordinating thematic initiatives in '''agro-complexity, food systems resilience''', and '''sustainable rural innovation'''.
As a representative of a '''UniTwin member institution''', I see this candidacy as a unique opportunity to strengthen UDJG’s role within the CS-DC ecosystem. I fully embrace the CS-DC mission to foster global collaboration, education, and research in complexity science.
I am ready to bring '''vision, experience, and energy''' to the Executive Committee and help shape the future of our UniTwin community.
----'''Sincerely,'''
'''Prof. Silvius STANCIU, PhD in Economics, PhD in Engineering, Habil.'''
Representative of “Dunărea de Jos” University of Galați (UDJG)
'''Professional Identifiers:'''
* Web of Science Author ID: R-8246-2017
* ORCID: 0000-0001-7697-0968
* Scopus ID: 36633317700
* Google Scholar: Silvius Stanciu
* ResearchGate: Silvius Stanciu
== New Candidatures to the Executive Committee for [2024] ==
'''Enver Oruro Puma, Ph.D., Principal Investigator of Neurocomputing, Social Simulation, and Complex Systems Laboratory at the Instituto Científico of Universidad Andina del Cusco, Peru'''
Dear Councillor of the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC. I am very honored to place my candidature for the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC Executive Committee. I am Enver Miguel Oruro Puma, Ph.D., principal investigator of Neurocomputing, Social Simulation, and Complex Systems Laboratory at the Instituto Científico of Universidad Andina del Cusco, Peru (https://sites.google.com/view/orurolab/). Since 2009, I have promoted and organized conferences and academic events on Complex Systems in Latin America. Recently, I have promoted the area of computational neuroscience on infant attachment (https://sites.google.com/view/envermiguel/seminar-in-maternal-infant-relationship-studies).
It would be a great honor for me if given the opportunity to contribute to the Executive Committee of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC in the integration of Complex System research groups in the Latin American Region. For this, I propose the creation of two periodical activities: 1) A Special Lectures Series on Complex Systems UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC oriented to experts on Complex Systems, and 2) A Invited Advanced Lectures UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC oriented to experts who do not identify explicitly with complex systems
'''Pierre Collet, full professor of Strasbourg University, on secondment to Universidad Andrés Bello, Instituto de Tecnología para la Innovación en Salud y Bienestar, Viña del Mar, Valparaiso, Chile'''.
Since 2012, I have contributed to the elaboration of the CS-DC Unesco UniTwin together with Paul Bourigne, Jeffrey Johnson and many others, and I have been co-coordinator of the CS-DC UniTwin with Cyrille Bertelle since its creation in 2014. Starting part of this great adventure has changed my academic and personal life: thanks to the UniTwin, I have changed my research from stochastic optimisation, artificial evolution and AI in general to complex systems and epistemology.
Participating in this UniTwin allowed me to make new contacts and start incredible projects that I could not have imagined before. It has even changed my life, as I am now living in Chile, having been recruited by ITISB, an institute founded by Carla Taramasco, the CS-DC representative for South America.
Together with Paul and others, we would like to revive UniTwin by preparing another world conference inspired by the great success of [https://cs-dc-15.org CS-DC'15] and also develop flagship projects such as POEM (Personalised Open Education for the Masses) and the [https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Portal:Complex_Systems_Digital_Campus/E-Laboratory_on_complex_computational_ecosystems ECCE e-lab], which this year has welcomed a new very active [[Figures of Play/Les figures du Jeu e-team|Figures of Play]] that has started the [https://ludocorpus.org/ Ludocorpus] in France.
As said before, this incredible UniTwin adventure always pays off for those who invest in it and in its great challenge: to develop the new science of complex systems through research and education. Through its projects, it contributes to making the world a better place to live in, despite the constant attacks on science coming from the most unlikely places.
Science is the solution, not the problem, to many of the world's plagues. We must put our energy into developing it and defend it against all its detractors.
That is why I am once again standing for election to the Executive Committee of this great CS-DC UniTwin. Modern science is Complex Systems science. It is important that its beacon continues to illuminate the world, and we must invest our time and energy in it.
== Candidature Deputy President for [2024, 2025] ==
'''Jeffrey JOHNSON, Professor of Complexity Science and Design, The Open University, UK'''
I offer myself as a candidate both to be President and to the Executive Committee of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC) so that I can help to drive it forward to achieve it goals.
I am particularly committed to our educational efforts. I have made four MOOCs on the FutureLearn Platform for CS-DC ( <nowiki>https://www.futurelearn.com/partners/unesco-unitwin-complex-systems-digital-campus</nowiki> ): Global Systems Science (2015-16); Systems Thinking and Complexity (2017-18); First Steps in Data Science with Google Analytics (2018-19) and COVID-19 - Pandemics, Modelling and Policy (2020). CS-DC has a great opportunity to become the global university providing interdisciplinary education for a better world.
I am also committed to our research mission with UNESCO towards the achieving the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals. My own research on representing the dynamics of complex multilevel systems is relevant to many of the research initiatives of CS-DC.
I have extensive experience working within the complex systems community. I have run various coordination actions supporting research programmes funded by the European Commission, I am a founder member and past president of the Complex Systems Society, and I am Deputy-President of the CS-DC. I believe this experience will enable me to make a significant contribution the CS-DC over the next three years.
== New Elected President for [2023, 2024] ==
Paul BOURGINE, present President of the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC, Complex Systems Institute of Paris
I offer myself as a candidate to be President of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC).
My previous commitment two years ago is below. The bad news is that it was not achieved. The good new is that we know now how to create 'autonomous community of autonomous communities' as a social network with IPFS (the InterPlanetary File System) like the new development of Wikipedia.
If elected, my first commitment is to finish this job as quickly as possible. My second commitment is simultaneously to visit each country of the UniTwin for creating its country.CS-DC and its roadmap with young eTeams shared by their Universities with a senior scientific committee. The eTeam projects will have the opportunity to be submitted to the EU calls or other ones.
Enver Oruro PhD, Head of Neurocomputing, Social Simulation and Complex Systems Laboratory, Universidad Andina del Cusco, Peru.
'''I would like to nominate Professor Paul Bourgine.'''
== New Elected Members to the Executive Committee for [2022,2023, 2024,2025] ==
'''2Dr Mohamed Abdellahi (Ould BABAH) Ebbe, Mauritania,'''
* Senior Advisor for the CILSS Executif Secretary for international Partnership and formal General Director of the Institut du Sahel/CILSS www.insah.org;
· Commissionaire General of CILSS for Horticulture Universal Expo of DOHA 2023-2024 <nowiki>https://www.dohaexpo2023.gov.qa/en/</nowiki> with central thems:
'''CENTRAL THEME: GREEN DESERT, BETTER ENVIRONMENT'''
* Executive Director of the Orthopterist Society (400 researchers among the globe) <nowiki>https://orthsoc.org/</nowiki>
* We have organized our last congress during 16-20 0ctober in Merida Mexique
<nowiki>https://ico2023mexico.com/</nowiki>
By obtaining the honor of having your hoped-for confidence for continuing this post of member of the executive council of the CS-DC, I will work, in priority and in the short term on two main subjects:
## '''The transboundary plague of the Desert Locust (Schistocerca gregaria (Forska l , 1775))''' This plague of the Desert Locust of more than 3000 years that cites all our holy books (the Tourah, the Bible and the Koran) and which continues to be present to this day and to wreak devastating devastation. In case of invasion, it can affect the agriculture and pastures of about 25 countries including those of the poorest countries of the world, from Mauritania to India, while its best and most effective strategy of struggle is preventive struggle by targeting its first centers of gregarization which are very small in space and much better known today. In 2005, the costs of its struggle in the Sahel and North Africa amounted to half a billion dollars, with 8 million farmers and pastoralists affected in the Sahel. It also massively invaded Asia and Africa. 'East Africa in 2020. On this subject, I have spent 30 years studying and fighting and developing a national strategy against this scourge which has made it possible to establish a whole prevention model and an institutional, technical, operational mechanism. and scientific effective in my country that can be adapted and copied and in all other affected countries: Biogeography of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria, Forskal, 1775: Identification, characterization and originality of a gregarious focus in central Mauritania (HR.HORS COLLEC.) (French Edition) - Babah Ebbe, Mohamed Abdallahi | 9782705670573 | Amazon.com.au | Books <nowiki>http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2010/01/07/improved-ways-to-prevent-the-desert-locust-in-mauritania-and-the-sahel</nowiki>, http: // whatsnext.blogs.cnn.com/2012/02/02/in-mauritania-sunny-with-a-chance-of-locusts/ I was invited last year by Royal Society 20-21 may 2024 to moderate one session on locust research management (La plasticité des criquets et des abeilles dans un monde en mutation | Société royale) and in a “International Conference on New Technology and Concepts for Sustainable Management of Locusts and Grasshoppers” held from 2 to 7 June 2024 in Jinan, Shandong, China.We are also preparing our Orthopterist congress in Argentina during the next mars 2026 <nowiki>https://ico2026.com.ar</nowiki>
'''All this is in addition of more than 110 publications or joint publications on the locust, its environment and management'''
# '''Senior Adviser to the CILSS Executive Secretary for International Partnerships'''] [Assistance to Mauritania (or 3 months) in the preparation of the organisation of the Nouakchott+10 High-Level Forum on pastoralism held in Nouakchott from 6 to 8 November 2024, various advising for the international partnership and the mobilization of resources including preparation of the organization of a round table planned in OPEC Vienna Austria for the mobilization of Arabic and Islamic funds for the financing of the CILSS 2050 strategic plan
# '''The Sahel Institute (INSAH) www.insah.org of the Permanent Interstate Committee for Drought Control (CILSS)''' that I lead and which has been doing extraordinary work for almost half a century in the field of research and development of animal and plant production techniques and also in the field of support for demographic, population and development policies, in favor of the populations of our 13 Sahelian, coastal and island member countries. This work covered the majority of good practice technologies in the field of plant and animal production, natural resource management, land rstauration, cultivation techniques, post-harvest, machining, dehulling operations technology. / ginning, Conservation and storage, good resilience practices
Research on the demographic dividend, gender and the empowerment of women and the Population / Development interrelations ... etc The results of all this work are contained in a database. data, online <nowiki>http://publications.insah.org/</nowiki>, containing more than 1,500 books, scientific and technical articles that will have to be modernized and connected to the CS Meta data.
As General Commissionaire of CILSS for Horticulture Universal Expo of DOHA 2023-2024 <nowiki>https://www.dohaexpo2023.gov.qa/en/</nowiki> with central thems:
'''CENTRAL THEME: GREEN DESERT, BETTER ENVIRONMENT''' I am working in introducing as detailed below:
'''CILSS ''contribution to the improvement of sustainable horticultural agricultural production in a context of drought'''''
'''I. PRESENTATION OF THE EXPO'''
Expo 2023 in Doha is part of the fight against desertification. The Expo will be held from 2 October 2023 to 28 March 2024 under the theme "'''''Green Desert, Better Environment'''''". The aim is to encourage, inspire and inform people about innovative solutions to reduce desertification. The exhibition will provide an international platform for participants, stakeholders, decision-makers, nongovernmental organizations and experts to address the global challenge of "desertification", while making a valuable contribution to achieving a sustainable future. During the 6 months of the Expo, nearly 3 million visitors from over 80 countries are expected
The objectives of this Expo are in line with those of the CILSS, which seeks to improve the living conditions of the people of the Sahel in a sustainable manner. This is why the participation of CILSS in this Expo is important for the region and its vulnerable populations.
'''OBJECTIVES OF EXPO 2023 DOHA, QATAR'''
Expo 2023 Doha, Qatar is defined by the following objectives:
- Encourage horticultural innovation by focusing on Qatar's climate, water and soil.
- Promote Expo 2023 in Doha, Qatar, as a catalyst for international investment and business opportunities.
- To propose innovative actions that would allow humanity to fight against desertification more quickly and decisively before it is too late.
- To build up useful environmental outputs for future generations.
'''II. ORGANISATION OF THE CILSS PARTICIPATION'''
'''II.1. GOALS OF CILSS EXHIBITION:'''
1. Sharing experiences and best practices,
2. Building International Partnership,
3. Promoting technology and innovation
Finally, I will continue to work actively with my colleagues on the Executive Board on all aspects of other cross-border scourges but also all aspects of improving agro-sylvo-pastoral production
'''Dr. Xabier E. Barandiaran, Lecturer at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Department of Philosophy, Donostia - San Sebastian, Spain'''
I would like to present [https://xabier.barandiaran.net myself] as a candidate for the Executive Committee. I have been the representative and coordinator between CS-DC and the [https://ehu.eus University of the Basque Country] since 2013. I develop my academic research at the [https://ias-research.net IAS-Research Centre for Life, Mind, and Society], with a focus on the understanding of autonomous and complex adaptive systems (from biology to cognition, from brains to societies). I am the author of over 50 indexed publications on topics related to complex systems, philosophy of mind, complex epistemology, simulation models of the origins of life, minimal agency, evolutionary robotics, complex social network analysis, etc. I recently received the “Award for Distinguished Early-Career Investigator” by the International Society for Artificial Life. Overal I have been awarded with 7 different grants and have actively participated on 15 different research projects. I have also supervised 2 PhD thesis (4 more still in development) and I hold an extensive record of scientific and innovative management experience in different academic and public institutions as founder of research networks ReteCog.Net and FLOK Society – Buen Conocer and head of RDI at Barcelona City Council (2016-2018). I have also organized several national workshops, summer schools and conferences, and 2 international summer schools, 4 international workshops and one international conference. I am currently the Principal Investigator of a founded research project (with more than 30 research-collaborators) on a complex systems' approach to the concept of autonomy beyond its classical conception as an individual bounded property.
As part of my university's goal of fostering international collaboration and opening up e-learning and research initiatives I would like to get more deeply involved on CS-DC with the following goals:
* To desing the infrastructure, learning-experience, research-experience and content for distributed, open access and high-quality digital campus facilities.
* To involve local agents (student, teachers, researchers and institutions) on the initiative of the network.
* To foster collaboration, co-production and resource sharing between teaching and research facilities between priviledged richer countries and lower-income ones. In particular, but not exclusively, and for obvious reasons related to sharing the same language, to foster ''collaboration between European and Latin-american universities'', research initiatives and students through CS-DC.
* To develop at least one ''prototype'' of a MSc level online course (and research network module) around complex cognitive systems that can serve as a model for the other fields of the network.
* To develop a clear conceptual and communicative framework for CS-DC to be able to attract more participants, resources and broader attention and success as pioneering international initiative.
'''Dr. habil. László Barna Iantovics, Professor at “George Emil Palade” Univ. of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Tg. Mures, Romania'''
With the present manifesto, I would like to be a candidate for the CS-DC Executive Committee. I have been the representative of “George Emil Palade” University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures from Romania in CS-DC by many years.
Some of my research and academic activities were related to the complex systems, including: publications; organized conferences (e.g. Symposium on Understanding Intelligent and Complex Systems - UICS 2009; 1st Int. Conf. on Complexity and Intelligence of the Artificial and Natural Complex Systems Medical Applications of the Complex Systems. Biomedical Computing -CANS 2008; 1st Int. Conf. on Bio-Inspired Computational Methods Used for Difficult Problems Solving. Development of Intelligent and Complex Systems - BICS 2008); membership in conference committees (e.g. Int. Conf. Emergent Properties in Natural and Artificial Complex Systems - EPNACS 2007; Workshop on Complex Systems and Self-organization Modeling -CoSSoM 2009); Journal Special Issues (e.g. Special Issue on Complexity in Sciences and Artificial Intelligence; Special Issue on Understanding Complex Systems); membership in Journal’s Editorial Boards (e.g. Complex Adaptive Systems Modeling -CASM, SpringerOpen), and contribution to research performed in projects and projects coordination (Social network of machines- SOON; Hybrid Medical Complex Systems -ComplexMediSys). I am the director of the Research Center on Artificial Intelligence, Data Science and Smart Engineering (Artemis).
I would like to involve myself much deeper in the life and activities of the CS-DC community.
My principal objectives are:
* To involve junior and senior researchers from my university in activities regarding research and education related to complex systems.
* To involve universities and research institutes to actively contribute to the CS-DC development.
* To involve myself in the joint coordination with other CS-DC members of a doctoral and postdoctoral students’ group that will be involved in the CS-DC community works.
* To strengthen the research direction with the theme: applications of intelligent complex systems and machine intelligence measuring. One of the subtopics of interest will be the application of complex systems, artificial intelligence and data science in medicine, pharmacology, and healthcare.
'''Flavia Mori SARTI, Ph.D., Professor and Researcher, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil'''
I would like to present my candidature for the CS-DC Executive Committee in the period 2022-2024 to contribute to the dissemination of Complex Systems Science.
I have been representative of the University of Sao Paulo (USP) at the CS-DC since 2012, and I have been working with complex systems since the creation of the Interdisciplinary Research Group of Complex Systems Modelling at the School of Arts, Sciences and Humanities (EACH-USP) in 2006. Our research group succesfully implemented the first interdisciplinary graduate program (Master) in Complex Systems Modelling in Brazil, in 2010. I have been participating in the coordinating commission of the program since 2010, and I was coordinator of the graduate program from 2010 to 2014.
I have supervised seven students in the Master program, which resulted in thesis, book chapters, and papers published on the subject of complex systems, including models on tax evasion, health systems regulation, food policy and nutrition programs, and complex networks on scientific collaboration and international food trade. I also contributed to the organization of the e-Session "Economics as a Complex Evolutionist System" on the CS-DC'15 World e-conference in 2015, and have been invited to present seminars on complex systems applied to health economics, health technology assessment, and public policy of nutrition and health.
My goals in the CS-DC Executive Committee include:
* To disseminate the role of CS-DC in education and research on Complex Systems, especially in Brazil and other developing countries;
* To support and to engage other research groups working with Complex Systems for participation in the CS-DC;
* To contribute further with management and organization of CS-DC activities during the period of 2022-2024;
* To continue supporting capacity building in Complex Systems through the Complex Systems Modelling Program at USP;
* To participate in innovation, research and development activities based on the application of Complex Systems in public policy and entrepreneurship.
'''Pr Panos Argyarakis, Professor in the University of Thessaloniki, Greece.'''
I have been with the Complex Systems Society since its inception in 2004 by participating in the NEST projects Dysonet and Giacs which created CSS. My experience in the Executive Committee will be to contribute towards the spreading of the Complexity idea to various levels of education throughout the different countries. I am currently the PI in an Erasmus+ network that introduces new models of teaching and investigating how is education been affected for future generations. I can contribute in decision making for such important activities, and also serve as liaison with the European Commission, and the Complex Systems Society, due to my past experience. I have extended organizational experience by organizing several internationally meetings in this field that were attended by large audiences. My research interests are related to Complex systems and Networks. Scale-free, random, and small world networks. Dynamic properties on networks, Diffusion, spreading phenomena on networks, disease spreading. Phase transitions, percolation model, reaction-diffusion processes, trapping processes. Random walks.
'''Ali Moussaoui, Professor, University of Tlemcen, Department of Mathematics, Algeria,'''
I wish to present my candidature to become member of the executive committee of the CS-DC, I wish to develop collaborations with the partner universities in the field of complex systems. I wish to participate in the creation of international mixed laboratories and international masters on complex systems.
In the past, I was responsible for a master's degree entitled: modeling of complex systems in our department, I am currently responsible for a research team entitled: Modeling of complex systems in our laboratory, I was responsible for a Franco-Algerian project on the modeling of complex systems. My research skills are focused on the modeling of complex natural and biological systems.
'''Carlos Gershenson, Research Professor, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.'''
I was involved with CS-DC in its initial years in UNESCO's UniTwin, also representing UNAM. I have been editor-in-chief of Complexity Digest since 2007. I co-organized the Conference on Complex Systems in 2017. I am currently vice-president secretary of the Complex Systems Society (CSS).
I am a strong proponent of open online learning. I managed to start a collaboration between UNAM and Coursera, which has led to more than a hundred MOOCs and millions of enrolled students.
I would be interested in strengthening the relationship between CS-DC and CSS, as well as other organizations.
==Elected members to the Executive Committee for 2021 ==
'''Carlos J. BARRIOS H., PhD., Professor, Bucaramanga, Colombia '''
I write to express my interest to candidacy to be part of the CS-DC Executive Committee. I'm very motivated to develop actions to strengthen digital ecosystem supporting research and education proposals of our CS-DC Council. Among these years participating in the CS-DC group, I can see different ways to leverage the impact and the development of our actions with computational strategies, and now, I want to be part of the leadership council joined mutual visions.
My experience leading the Advanced Computing System for Latin America and Caribbean (SCALAC : http://scalac.redclara.net ) and as member of other leadership boards in international projects (mainly between Europe and Latin America) supports my candidature. (linkedin.com/in/carlosjaimebh) Also, my role as professor, director and researcher contributes to build the common vision of the CS-DC Council and the leadership of the CS- DC Executive Committee.
'''Mina TEICHER, Professor of Bar-Ilan University, Israël'''
I submit my candidacy to the Executive Committee of the CS Digital Campus. If elected I will work towards our following needs, using my past experience in Professional international societies, universities managements and the data industry :
* We need in the near future to build an optimal and effective agreement with the Complex System Society.
* We need to build a business plan for fund raising.
* We need to build a modular budget for 2021.
* We need to build a strategy for geographically extension.
* We need to build a strategy for thematic extension.
* We need to build partnerships with the big multi national high tech Companies in network and in content.
'''Yasmin MERALI, Professor of University of Hull, UK'''
This manifesto is connected with the ideals that I had as a founding member of our UniNet which was conceived as part of the FP7 ASSYST project.
CS-DC has come a long way since its initial conception. The way I see it, there are three categories that have grown to emerge as our core activities-
* Capacity building through education and training in Complex Systems Science
* The application of Complex Systems Science to address global challenges
* The advancement of Complex Systems Science through research and development.
I believe this is a good time to link back to the inception of our UNITWIN which was in part inspired by considerations of issues at a human scale, and the desire to address the inequalities that divided the so-called developed and developing countries. This resonates strongly with the ambition of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) we are currently grappling with.
In the growth phase of the UNITWIN and CSDC we have been focused on extending the size of the network, and scaling up our educational offerings across the digital campus. In the next phase I believe we need to:
# understand and leverage the diversity and distinctive capabilities and resources (e.g. indigenous knowledge) of the countries in our network to develop a healthy ecosystem, and
# tailor the support that we provide to align with the diverse nature of their relational and social capital and their economic, political and environmental challenges and priorities with regard to the SDGs.
I am concerned that if we do not explicitly design a social/ideational exchange mechanism that attends to these two imperatives, we will not have full, active participation of all member institutions, and the countries of the South that do not currently have champions in Europe will be marginalized.
If elected I would champion a strategy of organizing ourselves following the Complex Adaptive Systems paradigm, as a hyper network with dynamically connected local clusters. In practical terms I would like to begin by establishing the local (country-based) clusters and establishing a discourse that would allow us to map the diverse profiles, challenges and aspirations for the different countries. This would then form the basis for the development of a mechanism for shaping the meaningful collaborative development of our three core activities to deliver advances that are globally co-ordinated and locally responsive.
Personal Profile: I am Professor of Systems Thinking at the University of Hull and have served as Director of the Centre Systems Studies there. Prior to that I was Co-Director of the Doctoral Training Centre for Complex Systems Science at the University of Warwick. My research is transdisciplinary, focusing on the use of Complex Systems Science to enhance the resilience of socio-economic systems. I am an Expert advisor to the EU and I have significant experience of lecturing internationally as Visiting Professor in Asia, Europe and the USA.
'''Céline ROZENBLAT: Professor, University of Lausanne - Institut de géographie et de durabilité (IGD), Switzerland'''
I'm pleased to applied to become member of the CS-DC council.
As founding member of CS-DC, my university, the university of Lausanne, is very engaged in Complex sciences.
I would not only represent my university, but also social science as geographer and vice-president of the International Geographical Union and member of the International Science Council commission on Urban Health and Well being.
I would act in the council in specific programs to develop the reality of the Digital Campus of the Complex systems.
All these actions combine very ambitious interdisciplinary approaches, and in this perspective, we developed with CS-DC for 3 years the TIMES Flagship Territorial Intelligence For Multilevel Equity And Sustainability. It comprises four main programs:
'''SIRE''': Socially Intelligence Roadmap Ecosystem
'''POLE:''' Personalized Open Lifelong Education
'''WOSI:''' Worldwide Open Smart Innovation
'''WOSP:''' Worldwide Open Stochastic Prediction
In this perspective a MOOC « Healthy Urban system » is now in development, basing the interdisciplinary approach on the CS-DC Road-Map grid. It seems very useful and relevant in this implementation stage.
I would help to develop other programs in this perspective\[Ellipsis]
'''André TINDANO, Director General of CARFS (African Center for Research and Training in Synecoculture)'''
What motivates me to aspire to the position of member of the executive committee of CS DC is my long term participation in the promotion of sustainable development and my commitment to the sharing of knowledge and expertise.
My research interests Sustainable agriculture, ecology, nutrition, life science. I have a strong experience in:
* Administration and management of development projects and programs;
* Accompaniment of associations and groups;
* Technical capacity building (animation of training sessions and reflection workshops).
* Action research;
* Sociological, socio-economic and economic studies.
* Development of development projects and programs;
* Training of trainers
* Results Based Management Training (RBM)
* Monitoring and evaluation of development programs and projects;
* Management of programs and development projects;
* Institutional development and organizational strengthening;
* Development and implementation of training / awareness / animation program;
* Very good knowledge of participatory methods
'''Guiou KOBAYASHI, Associate Professor at Federal University of ABC in São Paulo State, Brazil. '''
I worked with fault-tolerant computer systems for nuclear power plants and Metro signaling systems and recently my interests have evolved to resilience properties of Complex Systems. Traditionally, redundancy was the main feature for fault-tolerant and fail-safe systems, but the adaptability and the evolution of Complex Systems are the key elements for the resilience of these systems. How to characterize, design and implement these key elements in our future resilient systems? The Complex System - Digital Campus (CS-DC) is a way to create a world-wide community of researchers, philosophers and students to promote and discuss this kind of questions involving Complex Systems. For me, participating in its foundation was a great honor and I am very glad for the opportunity that I have had to contribute since 2012 in the consolidation of CS-DC.
Through this manifest I am applying to be one of the members of the new CS-DC's Executive Committee. I would like to help just a little more to strengthen and structure this fantastic community through which I had the opportunity to meet important people with very interesting works that expanded my knowledge of Complex Systems. Although my University and my personal contribution for CS-DC are very limited and small, I hope to continue to work with this great team.
'''Pierre COLLET, Professor of Computer Science, University of Strasbourg, France. Co-coordinator of the CS-DC UNESCO UniTwin'''
The CS-DC initiated by Paul Bourgine, Jeffrey Johnson, Cyrille Bertelle and many others has been an extraordinary adventure a) to instantiate as a UNESCO UniTwin and b) to develop and run since it was enacted in July 2014. Many a night have been spent on designing its inner workings, so that it can deliver an effective affordance for the scientists who wish to develop the science and teaching of Complex Systems. Indeed, many projects seeded in the CS-DC have come to fruition, showing the enormous potential of this fertile environment not only for research, but also for teaching: the BBB rooms set up by the CS-DC have not only made it possible for the CS-DC to organize conferences, but have also shown their potential as remote teaching rooms in many Universities around the world.
It has been an honour for me to be part of the development of the CS-DC since its beginning, but so much remains to be done!
In this manifesto, I hereby express my strong desire to continue developing the CS-DC in these trying times, when the effects of the pandemics stretch thin the social links that our research and teaching communities need most. My objectives for this new mandate are not only to deliver a new world conference (originally planned in 2020 but unfortunately delayed due to the high toll imposed on us all, teachers and researchers alike, by COVID-19) but also continue on developing not only efficient complex computational ecosystems (cheap powerful PARSEC machines have been installed in several universities) but more specifically remote teaching environments based on complex systems, to mitigate the terrible impact of the pandemic on face to face education, within the POEM CS-DC flagship, on which Paul Bourgine and myself have been working for many years now..
'''Mariana C. BROENS, Professor - UNESP - BRAZIL.'''
As members of the Executive Committee, our main challenge will be to raise, analyse and to discuss possible positive/negative ethical and political implications of the further development of the Complex Systems Science, and their application on studies of everyday social problems. In particular, We believe that the widespread use of complex system models and Big Data analytics can bring important questions about people's privacy, personal and corporate responsibility, widespread surveillance by public or private institutions, among many others, that should be deeply discussed in our community. Our contribution will be to raise and deepen these discussions from an interdisciplinary perspective.
'''Cyrille Bertelle, Professor in Computer Sciences, University Le Havre, France, co-coordinator of the CS-DC UNESCO UniTwin'''
I am a candidate for the CS-DC Executive Committee to represent the University of Le Havre
Normandy, which is co-coordinator with the University of Strasbourg of the convention of
recognition of the CS-DC as UniTwin by UNESCO. The University of Le Havre has made
available to the community, resources and skills to provide digital collaborative tools for the
organization of the Councils and the CS-DC'15 virtual conference.
The objective I wish to take is to facilitate the involvement of member universities not only
by their representatives on the council but by allowing researchers from these member
institutions to join concrete and accessible actions.
Co-responsible in the past of a master's degree on complex systems and then of the creation
of the institute on complex systems in Normandie (France) in a multidisciplinary framework,
I have participated in the setting up of the project labeled by the French national program of
investments for the future and entitled "Smart Port City". The aim is to think about the
future of territories in a sustainable development approach supported by new technologies
and concerned about the environment and the well-being of their citizens. My research skills
are focused on implementing the complexity of complex dynamic systems and networks,
crossing behavioral scales from the interaction of human behaviors to the technical
networks of the territory.
The book "complex systems, smart territories and mobility" from
the Springer's Understanding Complex Systems series, which will be published in January
2021 (https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030593018) illustrates the research
coordination actions that I lead in these fields.
'''Slimane Ben Miled, Senior Researcher at Pasteur Institute of Tunis, Professor at ENIT'''
Our Tunisian consortium want to constitute a collaborative Research Training Programs to increase data science capacity related to health research in Africa by building trainings and enhancing institutional capacity at African academic institutions.
The academy/project is based on 4 pillars to build a training ecosystem for Data and Engineering Science in health.
# A platform of federated master’s programs with à la carte optional courses covering informatics/computer science, biomedical informatics, data science, statistics, and public health). Each program will keep its independence, with a mention to the academy label, and this platform will allow to enrich the training with optional modules, seminars, and courses in the partner institutions. New curricula will be created in relation to ethical issues.
# Network of Doctoral programs and Executive programs
# Platform of federated Business incubator and a career center offers training, support and funding for projects related to the project’s topic.
This challenge is in perfect agreement with the Sustainable Development Goal 3 and the CS-DC flagship PHYSIOMES (Personalized Health phYSIcally, sOcially and Mentally for Each in their networkS).
'''Masa Funabashi: researcher of open complex systems at Sony Computer Science Laboratories, Inc.'''
I would like to contribute to the executive committee of CS-DC on the following two pillars:
* Promote the FOOD (From smart agrOecOnomy to smart fooD) flagship project that aims to resolve the health-diet-environment trilemma through the promotion of sustainable food systems, in collaboration with the e-lab "human augmentation of ecosystems" members institution: Sony CSL, Synecoculture Association, CARFS, and those who wish to participate in CS-DC collaboration.
* Construct a basic e-learning content on Synecoculture and ecological literacy as a part of CS-DC MOOCs and perform initial trials, principally in ECOWAS countries, through the Sony CSL-CARFS collaboration.
Through the development of on-going activities in FOOD project and making synergy with other flagship projects, I would like to contribute CS-DC as a member of the executive committee and realize further extension toward the achievement of global sustainability goals such as SDGs.
'''Dr Mohamed Abdellahi (Ould BABAH) Ebbe, Mauritania, '''
* General Director of the Institut du Sahel/CILSS www.insah.org;
* Executive Director of the Orthopterist Society (400 researchers among the globe) https://orthsoc.org/
By obtaining the honor of having your hoped-for confidence for this post of member of the executive council of the CS-DC, I will work, in priority and in the short term on two main subjects:
# '''The transboundary plague of the Desert Locust (Schistocerca gregaria (Forska l , 1775))''' This plague of the Desert Locust of more than 3000 years that cites all our holy books (the Tourah, the Bible and the Koran) and which continues to be present to this day and to wreak devastating devastation. In case of invasion, it can affect the agriculture and pastures of about 25 countries including those of the poorest countries of the world, from Mauritania to India, while its best and most effective strategy of struggle is preventive struggle by targeting its first centers of gregarization which are very small in space and much better known today. In 2005, the costs of its struggle in the Sahel and North Africa amounted to half a billion dollars, with 8 million farmers and pastoralists affected in the Sahel. It also massively invaded Asia and Africa. 'East Africa in 2020. On this subject, I have spent 30 years studying and fighting and developing a national strategy against this scourge which has made it possible to establish a whole prevention model and an institutional, technical, operational mechanism. and scientific effective in my country that can be adapted and copied and in all other affected countries: Biogeography of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria, Forskal, 1775: Identification, characterization and originality of a gregarious focus in central Mauritania (HR.HORS COLLEC.) (French Edition) - Babah Ebbe, Mohamed Abdallahi | 9782705670573 | Amazon.com.au | Books http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2010/01/07/improved-ways-to-prevent-the-desert-locust-in-mauritania-and-the-sahel, http: // whatsnext.blogs.cnn.com/2012/02/02/in-mauritania-sunny-with-a-chance-of-locusts/
# '''The Sahel Institute (INSAH) www.insah.org of the Permanent Interstate Committee for Drought Control (CILSS)''' that I lead and which has been doing extraordinary work for almost half a century in the field of research and development of animal and plant production techniques and also in the field of support for demographic, population and development policies, in favor of the populations of our 13 Sahelian, coastal and island member countries. This work covered the majority of good practice technologies in the field of plant and animal production, natural resource management, land restauration, cultivation techniques, post-harvest, machining, dehulling operations technology. / ginning, Conservation and storage, good resilience practices
Research on the demographic dividend, gender and the empowerment of women and the Population / Development interrelations ... etc
The results of all this work are contained in a database. data, online http://publications.insah.org/, containing more than 1,500 books, scientific and technical articles that will have to be modernized and connected to the CS Meta data.
Finally, I will work actively with my colleagues on the Executive Board on all aspects of other cross-border scourges but also all aspects of improving agro-sylvo-pastoral production tools as well as the fight against poverty and food insecurity and nutrition in line with the goals (SDGs)
'''Dr. Habil. László Barna Iantovics, Associate Professor at “George Emil Palade” University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures, Romania.'''
With the present manifesto, I would like to candidate as a member of the CS-DC Executive Committee. I am the representative of “George Emil Palade” University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures from Romania in CS-DC.
Some of my research and academic activities are related to the complex systems, including: publications, organization of conferences (e.g. Symposium on Understanding Intelligent and Complex Systems - UICS 2009; 1st Int. Conf. on Complexity and Intelligence of the Artificial and Natural Complex Systems Medical Applications of the Complex Systems. Biomedical Computing -CANS 2008; 1st Int. Conf. on Bio-Inspired Computational Methods Used for Difficult Problems Solving. Development of Intelligent and Complex Systems - BICS 2008), contribution to conference committees (e.g. Int. Conf. Emergent Proprieties in Natural and Artificial Complex Systems - EPNACS 2007; Workshop on Complex Systems and Self-organization Modeling -CoSSoM 2009), preparing journal special issues (e.g. Special Issue on Complexity in Sciences and Artificial Intelligence; Special Issue on Understanding Complex Systems), participating in journal’s editorial board (e.g. Complex Adaptive Systems Modeling -CASM, SpringerOpen), and contribution to research in projects and projects coordination (Social network of machines- SOON; Hybrid Medical Complex Systems -ComplexMediSys). I was the director of the center Advanced Computational Technologies – AdvCompTech in the frame of my university. At present, I am the director of the Center for Advanced Research in Information Technology from my university.
I would like much deeper involve myself in the life and activities of the CS-DC community.
My objectives:
* To involve junior and senior researchers from my university in activities regarding research and education. To motivate universities and research institutes from my country to contribute to CS-DC. I consider also universities and research institutes with that I have collaboration in the past.
* To PROPOSE the formation of a so-called doctoral and postdoctoral students group. In the case of doctoral and postdoctoral students probably in time more students would like to be involved in activities. In this framework, I suggest the organization yearly 3 times (from 4 to 4 months) workshops in that all the interested students could discuss, present their research and research in progress. With this occasion in the frame of workshops if there is interest could be established separate sessions with presentations also by B.Sc. and M.Sc. students.
* To PROPOSE the strengthening of the following research direction with the general topic: intelligent complex systems and machine intelligence measuring. One of the subtopic by interest will be complex systems approaches in medicine and healthcare. To be accomplishable this subject I propose in a first step the formation of a group of interested persons, after then the establishment of the functionality of the group, for example: discussions when are subjects that should be discussed etc.
==Elected members to the Executive Committee & as (Deputy-)Presidents==
'''Jeffrey JOHNSON, Professor of Complexity Science and Design, The Open University, UK'''
I offer myself as a candidate both to be President and to the Executive Committee of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC) so that I can help to drive it forward to achieve it goals.
I am particularly committed to our educational efforts. I have made four MOOCs on the FutureLearn Platform for CS-DC ( https://www.futurelearn.com/partners/unesco-unitwin-complex-systems-digital-campus ): Global Systems Science (2015-16); Systems Thinking and Complexity (2017-18); First Steps in Data Science with Google Analytics (2018-19) and COVID-19 - Pandemics, Modelling and Policy (2020). CS-DC has a great opportunity to become the global university providing interdisciplinary education for a better world.
I am also committed to our research mission with UNESCO towards the achieving the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals. My own research on representing the dynamics of complex multilevel systems is relevant to many of the research initiatives of CS-DC.
I have extensive experience working within the complex systems community. I have run various coordination actions supporting research programmes funded by the European Commission, I am a founder member and past president of the Complex Systems Society, and I am Deputy-President of the CS-DC. I believe this experience will enable me to make a significant contribution the CS-DC over the next three years.
'''Paul BOURGINE, present President of the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC, Complex Systems Institute of Paris'''
I offer myself as a candidate both to be President and to the Executive Committee of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC).
If elected, my main commitment is to create the conditions for a self-organized development of our UniTwin UNESCO CS-DC as autonomous communities of communities. This self-similar development will be the case both for the two main branches the UniTwin branch of our institutional members and the global eCampus branches of our individual scientific members:
* for the UniTwin branch, the communities of communities are a territorial cascade with Smart Continents, smart countries, smart cities for their sustainable development according our flagship TIMES (Territorial Intelligence for Multilevel Equity and Sustainability). The roadmap is always the same, i.e. the cascade of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals and their 169 Targets: but their relative importance and coherence within this cascade vary from one territory to the others. The institutional members of the UniTwin branch have signed their agreement with the Cooperation Programme signed with UNESCO. In 2021, the CS-DC will ask for a cascade of agreements inside each institutional member, in order to have a "one for all" amplification within the other branch, the e-campus branch.
* for the eCampus branch, the cascade of communities is along the refinement cascades when studying the theoretical and experimental challenges of complex systems. With Smart Continents'21, scientists are proposing their individual challenges that enact basic communities and communities of communities within the e-departments. In the "all for one" return, the roadmap of each university is the cascade of roadmaps within the eCampus where the University has at least one member. Furthermore each community can organise a monthly e-seminar or e-session in workshop as well as in CS-DC'21 for recorded advanced introductions. Such advanced introductions can be the basis for curriculum largely shared by the set of Universities having members in the community cascade of the curriculum.
This "accelerator of knowledge and knowhow one for all and all for one" will first benefit to the student curriculum through the flagship POEM (Personalized Open Education for the Masses). This accelerator can be extended through the flagship POLE (Personalized Open Lifelong Education) for a lifelong education. This extended accelerator will be open to all, independently of previously achieved academic levels, respectful of the diversity of social and cultural environments and in a higher and higher inclusive way including refugees, migrants and primary people. genders, religions or ways of life.
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----<nowiki>**</nowiki>Please ''login'' in Wikiversity and then use the ''<nowiki/>'edit''' button: your edition mode will be 'WYSIWYG'. Each Candidature with its manifesto can take inspiration from those for previous years.
''Decision of the 2025 General Assembly 27th April:''
''The 2026 elections are starting the 27th April, the date of the General Assembly:''
''(i) There will be an election for Vice-President starting the 27 April 2026.''
''(ii) To save time and effort - Instead of an election for 1/3 of the Executive Committee'' ''(EC) for 2025 we propose to keep the existing EC and invite members of the Council '''not on the EC''' to offer themselves as members of an enlarged Executive Committee. If less than six people propose themselves, they will be co-opted onto the Executive Committee. If more than six propose themselves we will hold an election for 1/3 EC.''
The deadline for your candidature is Saturday 16th May 2026 at 24:00 CET.
== Candidature for the New Vice-President for [2026, 2027] ==
'''Manifesto – Candidature for New Vice-President of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC'''
New Candidatures to the Executive Committee for [2026]
=== Manifesto – Candidature for the Executive Committee of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC ===
'''Flavia Mori SARTI, Ph.D., Professor and Researcher, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil'''
I present my interest in being candidate for the CS-DC Executive Committee to contribute to the dissemination of knowledge in complex systems at the local and global level. I am representative of the University of Sao Paulo (USP) at the CS-DC since 2012. I work with complex systems modeling since the creation of the Interdisciplinary Research Group of Complex Systems Modelling at the School of Arts, Sciences and Humanities (EACH-USP) in 2006. Our research group succesfully implemented the first interdisciplinary graduate program titled Master in Complex Systems Modeling in Brazil, in 2010. I have been participating in the program commission since 2010, and I was coordinator of the graduate program from 2010 to 2014.
I have supervised 12 students in the program and two postdoctoral fellows, followed by publication of several book chapters and papers on complex systems applied to public policies, including models on tax evasion, health systems regulation, health insurance, food policy and nutrition programs, and complex networks on scientific collaboration and global food trade. I have been invited to present seminars and talks on complex systems applied to food systems, health economics, and public policy.
My goals in the CS-DC Executive Committee include:
* To disseminate the role of CS-DC in education and research on complex systems, especially in developing countries;
* To support and to engage other research groups working with complex systems for participation in the CS-DC;
* To contribute further with management and organization of CS-DC activities during the period of 2022-2024;
* To continue supporting capacity building in complex systems through supervision and other academic activities;
* To foster innovation, research and development strategies through complex systems applications in public policy and entrepreneurship.
'''Alberto A. Rasia-Filho, MD, Ph.D, Professor and Researcher, Federal University of Health Sciences of Porto Alegre (UFCSPA) and Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil'''
Dear Councilors of the UNESCO CS-DC,
It is an honor to submit my candidacy for the CS-DC Executive Committee for 2026. Please let me introduce myself as a Full Professor of Physiology (UFCSPA), Supervisor in the Biosciences (UFCSPA) and Neuroscience Graduate Programs (UFRGS), and a researcher on human neuronal morphology, dendritic spines, synaptic plasticity, and social/emotional neural networks (National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, Brazil). Professional Identifier/ORCID: 0000-0003-4623-5916.
Currently, I am participating as head of the e-Team "Morphological Heterogeneity" in the UNESCO CS-DC, led by Prof. Enver Oruro Puma, Principal Investigator of the Morphodynamic Neuroscience and Behavior eLab CS-DC, and Prof. Grace E. Pardo, Scientific Research Institute, Continental University of Cusco, Peru. We integrate morphodynamics across different scales of brain organization and neural network functions in complex systems, considering neuronal morphology itself as an emergent level of organization. The structure of neural cells and their connectivity within the brain volume are morphodynamic features with interactions from cellular morphogenetic elements, the local cell neighborhood, and synaptic connections. In turn, the emergent functions of networks are organized around a series of conceptual, experimental, and computational foundations.
These ideas were developed—and are now open to additional discussions—in the recent article from our group: “New Directions for Complex Systems in Contemporary Neuroscience: A Morphodynamic and Emergent Function Approach” (Research Topic: Theoretical and Computational Insights into Brain-Based Cognition/Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience). This represents an ongoing research line available for further collaborations in Complex Systems Science.
I will be (1) committed to the Action Plan 2026 (and beyond) from the current 2026-31 Action Plan/Complex Systems Digital Campus UNESCO UniTwin, (2) working to integrate interdisciplinary approaches and eTeams, sharing knowledge and opportunities for complex systems education and research, as well as (3) contributing to country and continent engagement and representation in line with worldwide aims, (4) including the academic formation of young scientists.
----'''Norberto Garcia-Cairasco, BSc, MSc, PhD, Full Professor of Physiology-Neurophysiology, Ribeirão Preto School of Medicine, University of São Paulo (FMRP-USP), Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo State, Brazil.'''
Dear Councilors of the UNESCO CS-DC,
It is an honor for me to submit my candidacy for the CS-DC Executive Committee for 2026. Please, let me introduce myself as a Full Professor of Physiology-Neurophysiology, Ribeirão Preto School of Medicine, University of São Paulo (FMRP-USP), Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo State, Brazil. At FMRP-USP, I am Supervisor (Master and PhD) at both Graduate Programs in Physiology and Neurology/Neuroscience & Neuropsychiatry. I have been the Founder and the Director for almost 40 years of the Neurophysiology and Experimental Neuroethology Laboratory, where we conduct research in the characterization of epilepsies and associated neuropsychiatric comorbidities, using behavioral, electrophysiological, cellular, molecular and computational integrated tools, in both experimental and collaborative clinical settings. Our main funding comes from the State of São Paulo Foundation (FAPESP), the Federal agencies National Council for Research (CNPq) and the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES). Professional Identifier/ORCID: <nowiki>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8857-3775</nowiki>.
I am currently the Head of the e-Team “'''Epilepsy and Neuropsychiatric Comorbidities”''' in the UNESCO CS-DC, led by Prof. Enver Oruro and Prof. Grace E Pardo, Principal Investigators of the Neurocomputing, Social Simulation, and Complex Systems Laboratory at the Instituto Científico of Universidad Continental del Cusco, Peru.
Complex systems are involved in abnormal functioning and the refractoriness to pharmacological approaches of epileptogenic neural circuits, with additional multilevel complexity derived from associated, usually neuropsychiatric comorbidities. We, indeed, propose that the morphodynamics of neurons and glia in neural circuits can be studied as an initial step toward understanding proper wiring and stable properties, including neurotransmitters, neuromodulators, receptors, and intracellular signal transduction components, as well as plastic features, environmental stimuli, attention, and learning. These ideas were developed, and are now open to additional discussions, in the recent article from our group: “New Directions for Complex Systems in Contemporary Neuroscience: A Morphodynamic and Emergent Function Approach” (Research Topic: Theoretical and Computational Insights into Brain-Based Cognition/Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience). This represents an ongoing research line available for further collaborations in Complex Systems Science.
I will be (1) committed to the Action Plan 2026 (and beyond) from the current 2026-31 Action Plan/Complex Systems Digital Campus UNESCO UniTwin, (2) working to integrate interdisciplinary approaches and eTeams, sharing knowledge and opportunities for complex systems education and research, as well as (3) contributing to country and continent engagement and representation in line with worldwide aims, (4) including the academic formation of young scientists.
In addition to the above-mentioned agenda and goals, I will offer, for the leverage of outreach activities, my experience of more than four decades in the '''''Neuroscience & Arts''''' connection. In fact, I am co-Founder of the “Brain Awareness Week” in Brazil (since 2012) and currently the Coordinator at the Institute for Advanced Studies at USP-Ribeirão Preto of the “'''''Science, Arts, Education and Society Network - ScienArtES'''''”. In 2022, I received the Title of ''Doctor Honoris Causa'' (Biology) from the Universidad de Salamanca, Spain. Finally, I am also, since 2026, a Member of the Brain Literacy Initiative Alliance: Uniting for Brain Research-Informed Education Worldwide.
----
== Candidature for the New President for [2025, 2026] ==
'''Manifesto – Candidature for New President of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC'''
'''Prof. Paul Bourgine''' :
If elected, my main commitment is to create the conditions for a self-organized development of our UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC as autonomous communities of communities for our flagship TIMES and its Knowledge & Knowhow Accelerator one-for-all & all-for-one (KKA). We know now how to realize —for the two above commitments— the 3<sup>rd</sup> UNESCO commitment, i.e., the ‘computational ecosystem’. It will use the mature part of Web 3.0, especially the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS). Thanks to our previous efforts especially of the two last years, the remaining work amount is ten times less than we were anticipating at the beginning of the 2<sup>nd</sup> renewal of our UniTwin by UNESCO 2020-2026.
If elected, my duty will be not only to fulfill entirely the commitments of our Cooperation Program with UNESCO but also starting an exponential increasing development wave for our UniTwin network (through their continent and country Councils) and of our e-Campus (through CS-DC’25 and e-Labs’26 Conferences especially for our Flagships for sustainable development). The Knowledge & Knowhow Accelerator will directly benefit from 1) such conference series, 2) our past and new flagships for sustainable development and 3) a new decentralized strategy for collecting donations in our decentralized network of X-Legal Entities.
== New Candidatures to the Executive Committee for [2025] ==
=== Manifesto – Candidature for the Executive Committee of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC ===
'''Prof. Silvius STANCIU, PhD in Economics, PhD in Engineering, Habil.'''
Full Professor, “Dunărea de Jos” University of Galați (UDJG), Romania
Editor-in-Chief, ''Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development Studies (JARDS)''
Former Vice-Rector, Former Director of DFCTT and CTT UGAL
----'''Dear Councillors,'''
It is a great honor for me to submit my candidacy for the Executive Committee of the UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC). With more than '''30 years of experience in academia''', I am currently Full Professor and doctoral advisor at “Dunărea de Jos” University of Galați (UDJG), Romania — a public research university with a strong regional impact and a long-standing tradition in interdisciplinary education and innovation.
I hold two doctoral degrees — one in Economics and one in Engineering — and I am a habilitated professor. I have published '''163 ISI-indexed scientific articles''' and have a '''Clarivate H-index of 14'''. My research focuses on '''food security, circular economy, technological innovation, rural development''', and '''complex systems in agro-food value chains'''.
I am the founder and coordinator of Romania’s first doctoral program in ''Engineering and Management in Agriculture and Rural Development (IMADR)'', with '''9 PhD graduates''' and '''9 doctoral students''' currently under my supervision. I also serve as '''Editor-in-Chief''' of the ''Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development Studies (JARDS)'', dedicated to interdisciplinary research in sustainable food and rural systems.
Over the past decade, I have been involved as director or expert in '''more than 45 national and international research projects''', including Horizon-compatible initiatives and cross-border cooperation programs. I coordinated a '''Romania–Republic of Moldova cross-border project''' (2020–2021) and currently lead '''two new ROMD-funded projects''' entering implementation.
My former institutional leadership roles include:
* '''Vice-Rector for Research and Innovation'''
* '''Director of the Department for Institutional Development (DFCTT)''' and of the '''Technology Transfer Center (CTT UGAL)'''
* '''Member of national and international quality and research bodies''', including CNATDCU, ARACIS, and CMPTJ
----'''If elected, I am committed to:'''
* Expanding the CS-DC network in '''Eastern Europe and the Black Sea region''', enhancing scientific and territorial diversity;
* Supporting '''POEM''' and '''FOOD flagship programs''' through digital education, doctoral/postdoctoral collaboration, and innovation ecosystems;
* Promoting '''open science''', international e-seminars, and interdisciplinary MOOCs;
* Coordinating thematic initiatives in '''agro-complexity, food systems resilience''', and '''sustainable rural innovation'''.
As a representative of a '''UniTwin member institution''', I see this candidacy as a unique opportunity to strengthen UDJG’s role within the CS-DC ecosystem. I fully embrace the CS-DC mission to foster global collaboration, education, and research in complexity science.
I am ready to bring '''vision, experience, and energy''' to the Executive Committee and help shape the future of our UniTwin community.
----'''Sincerely,'''
'''Prof. Silvius STANCIU, PhD in Economics, PhD in Engineering, Habil.'''
Representative of “Dunărea de Jos” University of Galați (UDJG)
'''Professional Identifiers:'''
* Web of Science Author ID: R-8246-2017
* ORCID: 0000-0001-7697-0968
* Scopus ID: 36633317700
* Google Scholar: Silvius Stanciu
* ResearchGate: Silvius Stanciu
== New Candidatures to the Executive Committee for [2024] ==
'''Enver Oruro Puma, Ph.D., Principal Investigator of Neurocomputing, Social Simulation, and Complex Systems Laboratory at the Instituto Científico of Universidad Andina del Cusco, Peru'''
Dear Councillor of the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC. I am very honored to place my candidature for the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC Executive Committee. I am Enver Miguel Oruro Puma, Ph.D., principal investigator of Neurocomputing, Social Simulation, and Complex Systems Laboratory at the Instituto Científico of Universidad Andina del Cusco, Peru (https://sites.google.com/view/orurolab/). Since 2009, I have promoted and organized conferences and academic events on Complex Systems in Latin America. Recently, I have promoted the area of computational neuroscience on infant attachment (https://sites.google.com/view/envermiguel/seminar-in-maternal-infant-relationship-studies).
It would be a great honor for me if given the opportunity to contribute to the Executive Committee of UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC in the integration of Complex System research groups in the Latin American Region. For this, I propose the creation of two periodical activities: 1) A Special Lectures Series on Complex Systems UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC oriented to experts on Complex Systems, and 2) A Invited Advanced Lectures UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC oriented to experts who do not identify explicitly with complex systems
'''Pierre Collet, full professor of Strasbourg University, on secondment to Universidad Andrés Bello, Instituto de Tecnología para la Innovación en Salud y Bienestar, Viña del Mar, Valparaiso, Chile'''.
Since 2012, I have contributed to the elaboration of the CS-DC Unesco UniTwin together with Paul Bourigne, Jeffrey Johnson and many others, and I have been co-coordinator of the CS-DC UniTwin with Cyrille Bertelle since its creation in 2014. Starting part of this great adventure has changed my academic and personal life: thanks to the UniTwin, I have changed my research from stochastic optimisation, artificial evolution and AI in general to complex systems and epistemology.
Participating in this UniTwin allowed me to make new contacts and start incredible projects that I could not have imagined before. It has even changed my life, as I am now living in Chile, having been recruited by ITISB, an institute founded by Carla Taramasco, the CS-DC representative for South America.
Together with Paul and others, we would like to revive UniTwin by preparing another world conference inspired by the great success of [https://cs-dc-15.org CS-DC'15] and also develop flagship projects such as POEM (Personalised Open Education for the Masses) and the [https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Portal:Complex_Systems_Digital_Campus/E-Laboratory_on_complex_computational_ecosystems ECCE e-lab], which this year has welcomed a new very active [[Figures of Play/Les figures du Jeu e-team|Figures of Play]] that has started the [https://ludocorpus.org/ Ludocorpus] in France.
As said before, this incredible UniTwin adventure always pays off for those who invest in it and in its great challenge: to develop the new science of complex systems through research and education. Through its projects, it contributes to making the world a better place to live in, despite the constant attacks on science coming from the most unlikely places.
Science is the solution, not the problem, to many of the world's plagues. We must put our energy into developing it and defend it against all its detractors.
That is why I am once again standing for election to the Executive Committee of this great CS-DC UniTwin. Modern science is Complex Systems science. It is important that its beacon continues to illuminate the world, and we must invest our time and energy in it.
== Candidature Deputy President for [2024, 2025] ==
'''Jeffrey JOHNSON, Professor of Complexity Science and Design, The Open University, UK'''
I offer myself as a candidate both to be President and to the Executive Committee of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC) so that I can help to drive it forward to achieve it goals.
I am particularly committed to our educational efforts. I have made four MOOCs on the FutureLearn Platform for CS-DC ( <nowiki>https://www.futurelearn.com/partners/unesco-unitwin-complex-systems-digital-campus</nowiki> ): Global Systems Science (2015-16); Systems Thinking and Complexity (2017-18); First Steps in Data Science with Google Analytics (2018-19) and COVID-19 - Pandemics, Modelling and Policy (2020). CS-DC has a great opportunity to become the global university providing interdisciplinary education for a better world.
I am also committed to our research mission with UNESCO towards the achieving the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals. My own research on representing the dynamics of complex multilevel systems is relevant to many of the research initiatives of CS-DC.
I have extensive experience working within the complex systems community. I have run various coordination actions supporting research programmes funded by the European Commission, I am a founder member and past president of the Complex Systems Society, and I am Deputy-President of the CS-DC. I believe this experience will enable me to make a significant contribution the CS-DC over the next three years.
== New Elected President for [2023, 2024] ==
Paul BOURGINE, present President of the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC, Complex Systems Institute of Paris
I offer myself as a candidate to be President of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC).
My previous commitment two years ago is below. The bad news is that it was not achieved. The good new is that we know now how to create 'autonomous community of autonomous communities' as a social network with IPFS (the InterPlanetary File System) like the new development of Wikipedia.
If elected, my first commitment is to finish this job as quickly as possible. My second commitment is simultaneously to visit each country of the UniTwin for creating its country.CS-DC and its roadmap with young eTeams shared by their Universities with a senior scientific committee. The eTeam projects will have the opportunity to be submitted to the EU calls or other ones.
Enver Oruro PhD, Head of Neurocomputing, Social Simulation and Complex Systems Laboratory, Universidad Andina del Cusco, Peru.
'''I would like to nominate Professor Paul Bourgine.'''
== New Elected Members to the Executive Committee for [2022,2023, 2024,2025] ==
'''2Dr Mohamed Abdellahi (Ould BABAH) Ebbe, Mauritania,'''
* Senior Advisor for the CILSS Executif Secretary for international Partnership and formal General Director of the Institut du Sahel/CILSS www.insah.org;
· Commissionaire General of CILSS for Horticulture Universal Expo of DOHA 2023-2024 <nowiki>https://www.dohaexpo2023.gov.qa/en/</nowiki> with central thems:
'''CENTRAL THEME: GREEN DESERT, BETTER ENVIRONMENT'''
* Executive Director of the Orthopterist Society (400 researchers among the globe) <nowiki>https://orthsoc.org/</nowiki>
* We have organized our last congress during 16-20 0ctober in Merida Mexique
<nowiki>https://ico2023mexico.com/</nowiki>
By obtaining the honor of having your hoped-for confidence for continuing this post of member of the executive council of the CS-DC, I will work, in priority and in the short term on two main subjects:
## '''The transboundary plague of the Desert Locust (Schistocerca gregaria (Forska l , 1775))''' This plague of the Desert Locust of more than 3000 years that cites all our holy books (the Tourah, the Bible and the Koran) and which continues to be present to this day and to wreak devastating devastation. In case of invasion, it can affect the agriculture and pastures of about 25 countries including those of the poorest countries of the world, from Mauritania to India, while its best and most effective strategy of struggle is preventive struggle by targeting its first centers of gregarization which are very small in space and much better known today. In 2005, the costs of its struggle in the Sahel and North Africa amounted to half a billion dollars, with 8 million farmers and pastoralists affected in the Sahel. It also massively invaded Asia and Africa. 'East Africa in 2020. On this subject, I have spent 30 years studying and fighting and developing a national strategy against this scourge which has made it possible to establish a whole prevention model and an institutional, technical, operational mechanism. and scientific effective in my country that can be adapted and copied and in all other affected countries: Biogeography of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria, Forskal, 1775: Identification, characterization and originality of a gregarious focus in central Mauritania (HR.HORS COLLEC.) (French Edition) - Babah Ebbe, Mohamed Abdallahi | 9782705670573 | Amazon.com.au | Books <nowiki>http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2010/01/07/improved-ways-to-prevent-the-desert-locust-in-mauritania-and-the-sahel</nowiki>, http: // whatsnext.blogs.cnn.com/2012/02/02/in-mauritania-sunny-with-a-chance-of-locusts/ I was invited last year by Royal Society 20-21 may 2024 to moderate one session on locust research management (La plasticité des criquets et des abeilles dans un monde en mutation | Société royale) and in a “International Conference on New Technology and Concepts for Sustainable Management of Locusts and Grasshoppers” held from 2 to 7 June 2024 in Jinan, Shandong, China.We are also preparing our Orthopterist congress in Argentina during the next mars 2026 <nowiki>https://ico2026.com.ar</nowiki>
'''All this is in addition of more than 110 publications or joint publications on the locust, its environment and management'''
# '''Senior Adviser to the CILSS Executive Secretary for International Partnerships'''] [Assistance to Mauritania (or 3 months) in the preparation of the organisation of the Nouakchott+10 High-Level Forum on pastoralism held in Nouakchott from 6 to 8 November 2024, various advising for the international partnership and the mobilization of resources including preparation of the organization of a round table planned in OPEC Vienna Austria for the mobilization of Arabic and Islamic funds for the financing of the CILSS 2050 strategic plan
# '''The Sahel Institute (INSAH) www.insah.org of the Permanent Interstate Committee for Drought Control (CILSS)''' that I lead and which has been doing extraordinary work for almost half a century in the field of research and development of animal and plant production techniques and also in the field of support for demographic, population and development policies, in favor of the populations of our 13 Sahelian, coastal and island member countries. This work covered the majority of good practice technologies in the field of plant and animal production, natural resource management, land rstauration, cultivation techniques, post-harvest, machining, dehulling operations technology. / ginning, Conservation and storage, good resilience practices
Research on the demographic dividend, gender and the empowerment of women and the Population / Development interrelations ... etc The results of all this work are contained in a database. data, online <nowiki>http://publications.insah.org/</nowiki>, containing more than 1,500 books, scientific and technical articles that will have to be modernized and connected to the CS Meta data.
As General Commissionaire of CILSS for Horticulture Universal Expo of DOHA 2023-2024 <nowiki>https://www.dohaexpo2023.gov.qa/en/</nowiki> with central thems:
'''CENTRAL THEME: GREEN DESERT, BETTER ENVIRONMENT''' I am working in introducing as detailed below:
'''CILSS ''contribution to the improvement of sustainable horticultural agricultural production in a context of drought'''''
'''I. PRESENTATION OF THE EXPO'''
Expo 2023 in Doha is part of the fight against desertification. The Expo will be held from 2 October 2023 to 28 March 2024 under the theme "'''''Green Desert, Better Environment'''''". The aim is to encourage, inspire and inform people about innovative solutions to reduce desertification. The exhibition will provide an international platform for participants, stakeholders, decision-makers, nongovernmental organizations and experts to address the global challenge of "desertification", while making a valuable contribution to achieving a sustainable future. During the 6 months of the Expo, nearly 3 million visitors from over 80 countries are expected
The objectives of this Expo are in line with those of the CILSS, which seeks to improve the living conditions of the people of the Sahel in a sustainable manner. This is why the participation of CILSS in this Expo is important for the region and its vulnerable populations.
'''OBJECTIVES OF EXPO 2023 DOHA, QATAR'''
Expo 2023 Doha, Qatar is defined by the following objectives:
- Encourage horticultural innovation by focusing on Qatar's climate, water and soil.
- Promote Expo 2023 in Doha, Qatar, as a catalyst for international investment and business opportunities.
- To propose innovative actions that would allow humanity to fight against desertification more quickly and decisively before it is too late.
- To build up useful environmental outputs for future generations.
'''II. ORGANISATION OF THE CILSS PARTICIPATION'''
'''II.1. GOALS OF CILSS EXHIBITION:'''
1. Sharing experiences and best practices,
2. Building International Partnership,
3. Promoting technology and innovation
Finally, I will continue to work actively with my colleagues on the Executive Board on all aspects of other cross-border scourges but also all aspects of improving agro-sylvo-pastoral production
'''Dr. Xabier E. Barandiaran, Lecturer at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Department of Philosophy, Donostia - San Sebastian, Spain'''
I would like to present [https://xabier.barandiaran.net myself] as a candidate for the Executive Committee. I have been the representative and coordinator between CS-DC and the [https://ehu.eus University of the Basque Country] since 2013. I develop my academic research at the [https://ias-research.net IAS-Research Centre for Life, Mind, and Society], with a focus on the understanding of autonomous and complex adaptive systems (from biology to cognition, from brains to societies). I am the author of over 50 indexed publications on topics related to complex systems, philosophy of mind, complex epistemology, simulation models of the origins of life, minimal agency, evolutionary robotics, complex social network analysis, etc. I recently received the “Award for Distinguished Early-Career Investigator” by the International Society for Artificial Life. Overal I have been awarded with 7 different grants and have actively participated on 15 different research projects. I have also supervised 2 PhD thesis (4 more still in development) and I hold an extensive record of scientific and innovative management experience in different academic and public institutions as founder of research networks ReteCog.Net and FLOK Society – Buen Conocer and head of RDI at Barcelona City Council (2016-2018). I have also organized several national workshops, summer schools and conferences, and 2 international summer schools, 4 international workshops and one international conference. I am currently the Principal Investigator of a founded research project (with more than 30 research-collaborators) on a complex systems' approach to the concept of autonomy beyond its classical conception as an individual bounded property.
As part of my university's goal of fostering international collaboration and opening up e-learning and research initiatives I would like to get more deeply involved on CS-DC with the following goals:
* To desing the infrastructure, learning-experience, research-experience and content for distributed, open access and high-quality digital campus facilities.
* To involve local agents (student, teachers, researchers and institutions) on the initiative of the network.
* To foster collaboration, co-production and resource sharing between teaching and research facilities between priviledged richer countries and lower-income ones. In particular, but not exclusively, and for obvious reasons related to sharing the same language, to foster ''collaboration between European and Latin-american universities'', research initiatives and students through CS-DC.
* To develop at least one ''prototype'' of a MSc level online course (and research network module) around complex cognitive systems that can serve as a model for the other fields of the network.
* To develop a clear conceptual and communicative framework for CS-DC to be able to attract more participants, resources and broader attention and success as pioneering international initiative.
'''Dr. habil. László Barna Iantovics, Professor at “George Emil Palade” Univ. of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Tg. Mures, Romania'''
With the present manifesto, I would like to be a candidate for the CS-DC Executive Committee. I have been the representative of “George Emil Palade” University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures from Romania in CS-DC by many years.
Some of my research and academic activities were related to the complex systems, including: publications; organized conferences (e.g. Symposium on Understanding Intelligent and Complex Systems - UICS 2009; 1st Int. Conf. on Complexity and Intelligence of the Artificial and Natural Complex Systems Medical Applications of the Complex Systems. Biomedical Computing -CANS 2008; 1st Int. Conf. on Bio-Inspired Computational Methods Used for Difficult Problems Solving. Development of Intelligent and Complex Systems - BICS 2008); membership in conference committees (e.g. Int. Conf. Emergent Properties in Natural and Artificial Complex Systems - EPNACS 2007; Workshop on Complex Systems and Self-organization Modeling -CoSSoM 2009); Journal Special Issues (e.g. Special Issue on Complexity in Sciences and Artificial Intelligence; Special Issue on Understanding Complex Systems); membership in Journal’s Editorial Boards (e.g. Complex Adaptive Systems Modeling -CASM, SpringerOpen), and contribution to research performed in projects and projects coordination (Social network of machines- SOON; Hybrid Medical Complex Systems -ComplexMediSys). I am the director of the Research Center on Artificial Intelligence, Data Science and Smart Engineering (Artemis).
I would like to involve myself much deeper in the life and activities of the CS-DC community.
My principal objectives are:
* To involve junior and senior researchers from my university in activities regarding research and education related to complex systems.
* To involve universities and research institutes to actively contribute to the CS-DC development.
* To involve myself in the joint coordination with other CS-DC members of a doctoral and postdoctoral students’ group that will be involved in the CS-DC community works.
* To strengthen the research direction with the theme: applications of intelligent complex systems and machine intelligence measuring. One of the subtopics of interest will be the application of complex systems, artificial intelligence and data science in medicine, pharmacology, and healthcare.
'''Flavia Mori SARTI, Ph.D., Professor and Researcher, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil'''
I would like to present my candidature for the CS-DC Executive Committee in the period 2022-2024 to contribute to the dissemination of Complex Systems Science.
I have been representative of the University of Sao Paulo (USP) at the CS-DC since 2012, and I have been working with complex systems since the creation of the Interdisciplinary Research Group of Complex Systems Modelling at the School of Arts, Sciences and Humanities (EACH-USP) in 2006. Our research group succesfully implemented the first interdisciplinary graduate program (Master) in Complex Systems Modelling in Brazil, in 2010. I have been participating in the coordinating commission of the program since 2010, and I was coordinator of the graduate program from 2010 to 2014.
I have supervised seven students in the Master program, which resulted in thesis, book chapters, and papers published on the subject of complex systems, including models on tax evasion, health systems regulation, food policy and nutrition programs, and complex networks on scientific collaboration and international food trade. I also contributed to the organization of the e-Session "Economics as a Complex Evolutionist System" on the CS-DC'15 World e-conference in 2015, and have been invited to present seminars on complex systems applied to health economics, health technology assessment, and public policy of nutrition and health.
My goals in the CS-DC Executive Committee include:
* To disseminate the role of CS-DC in education and research on Complex Systems, especially in Brazil and other developing countries;
* To support and to engage other research groups working with Complex Systems for participation in the CS-DC;
* To contribute further with management and organization of CS-DC activities during the period of 2022-2024;
* To continue supporting capacity building in Complex Systems through the Complex Systems Modelling Program at USP;
* To participate in innovation, research and development activities based on the application of Complex Systems in public policy and entrepreneurship.
'''Pr Panos Argyarakis, Professor in the University of Thessaloniki, Greece.'''
I have been with the Complex Systems Society since its inception in 2004 by participating in the NEST projects Dysonet and Giacs which created CSS. My experience in the Executive Committee will be to contribute towards the spreading of the Complexity idea to various levels of education throughout the different countries. I am currently the PI in an Erasmus+ network that introduces new models of teaching and investigating how is education been affected for future generations. I can contribute in decision making for such important activities, and also serve as liaison with the European Commission, and the Complex Systems Society, due to my past experience. I have extended organizational experience by organizing several internationally meetings in this field that were attended by large audiences. My research interests are related to Complex systems and Networks. Scale-free, random, and small world networks. Dynamic properties on networks, Diffusion, spreading phenomena on networks, disease spreading. Phase transitions, percolation model, reaction-diffusion processes, trapping processes. Random walks.
'''Ali Moussaoui, Professor, University of Tlemcen, Department of Mathematics, Algeria,'''
I wish to present my candidature to become member of the executive committee of the CS-DC, I wish to develop collaborations with the partner universities in the field of complex systems. I wish to participate in the creation of international mixed laboratories and international masters on complex systems.
In the past, I was responsible for a master's degree entitled: modeling of complex systems in our department, I am currently responsible for a research team entitled: Modeling of complex systems in our laboratory, I was responsible for a Franco-Algerian project on the modeling of complex systems. My research skills are focused on the modeling of complex natural and biological systems.
'''Carlos Gershenson, Research Professor, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.'''
I was involved with CS-DC in its initial years in UNESCO's UniTwin, also representing UNAM. I have been editor-in-chief of Complexity Digest since 2007. I co-organized the Conference on Complex Systems in 2017. I am currently vice-president secretary of the Complex Systems Society (CSS).
I am a strong proponent of open online learning. I managed to start a collaboration between UNAM and Coursera, which has led to more than a hundred MOOCs and millions of enrolled students.
I would be interested in strengthening the relationship between CS-DC and CSS, as well as other organizations.
==Elected members to the Executive Committee for 2021 ==
'''Carlos J. BARRIOS H., PhD., Professor, Bucaramanga, Colombia '''
I write to express my interest to candidacy to be part of the CS-DC Executive Committee. I'm very motivated to develop actions to strengthen digital ecosystem supporting research and education proposals of our CS-DC Council. Among these years participating in the CS-DC group, I can see different ways to leverage the impact and the development of our actions with computational strategies, and now, I want to be part of the leadership council joined mutual visions.
My experience leading the Advanced Computing System for Latin America and Caribbean (SCALAC : http://scalac.redclara.net ) and as member of other leadership boards in international projects (mainly between Europe and Latin America) supports my candidature. (linkedin.com/in/carlosjaimebh) Also, my role as professor, director and researcher contributes to build the common vision of the CS-DC Council and the leadership of the CS- DC Executive Committee.
'''Mina TEICHER, Professor of Bar-Ilan University, Israël'''
I submit my candidacy to the Executive Committee of the CS Digital Campus. If elected I will work towards our following needs, using my past experience in Professional international societies, universities managements and the data industry :
* We need in the near future to build an optimal and effective agreement with the Complex System Society.
* We need to build a business plan for fund raising.
* We need to build a modular budget for 2021.
* We need to build a strategy for geographically extension.
* We need to build a strategy for thematic extension.
* We need to build partnerships with the big multi national high tech Companies in network and in content.
'''Yasmin MERALI, Professor of University of Hull, UK'''
This manifesto is connected with the ideals that I had as a founding member of our UniNet which was conceived as part of the FP7 ASSYST project.
CS-DC has come a long way since its initial conception. The way I see it, there are three categories that have grown to emerge as our core activities-
* Capacity building through education and training in Complex Systems Science
* The application of Complex Systems Science to address global challenges
* The advancement of Complex Systems Science through research and development.
I believe this is a good time to link back to the inception of our UNITWIN which was in part inspired by considerations of issues at a human scale, and the desire to address the inequalities that divided the so-called developed and developing countries. This resonates strongly with the ambition of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) we are currently grappling with.
In the growth phase of the UNITWIN and CSDC we have been focused on extending the size of the network, and scaling up our educational offerings across the digital campus. In the next phase I believe we need to:
# understand and leverage the diversity and distinctive capabilities and resources (e.g. indigenous knowledge) of the countries in our network to develop a healthy ecosystem, and
# tailor the support that we provide to align with the diverse nature of their relational and social capital and their economic, political and environmental challenges and priorities with regard to the SDGs.
I am concerned that if we do not explicitly design a social/ideational exchange mechanism that attends to these two imperatives, we will not have full, active participation of all member institutions, and the countries of the South that do not currently have champions in Europe will be marginalized.
If elected I would champion a strategy of organizing ourselves following the Complex Adaptive Systems paradigm, as a hyper network with dynamically connected local clusters. In practical terms I would like to begin by establishing the local (country-based) clusters and establishing a discourse that would allow us to map the diverse profiles, challenges and aspirations for the different countries. This would then form the basis for the development of a mechanism for shaping the meaningful collaborative development of our three core activities to deliver advances that are globally co-ordinated and locally responsive.
Personal Profile: I am Professor of Systems Thinking at the University of Hull and have served as Director of the Centre Systems Studies there. Prior to that I was Co-Director of the Doctoral Training Centre for Complex Systems Science at the University of Warwick. My research is transdisciplinary, focusing on the use of Complex Systems Science to enhance the resilience of socio-economic systems. I am an Expert advisor to the EU and I have significant experience of lecturing internationally as Visiting Professor in Asia, Europe and the USA.
'''Céline ROZENBLAT: Professor, University of Lausanne - Institut de géographie et de durabilité (IGD), Switzerland'''
I'm pleased to applied to become member of the CS-DC council.
As founding member of CS-DC, my university, the university of Lausanne, is very engaged in Complex sciences.
I would not only represent my university, but also social science as geographer and vice-president of the International Geographical Union and member of the International Science Council commission on Urban Health and Well being.
I would act in the council in specific programs to develop the reality of the Digital Campus of the Complex systems.
All these actions combine very ambitious interdisciplinary approaches, and in this perspective, we developed with CS-DC for 3 years the TIMES Flagship Territorial Intelligence For Multilevel Equity And Sustainability. It comprises four main programs:
'''SIRE''': Socially Intelligence Roadmap Ecosystem
'''POLE:''' Personalized Open Lifelong Education
'''WOSI:''' Worldwide Open Smart Innovation
'''WOSP:''' Worldwide Open Stochastic Prediction
In this perspective a MOOC « Healthy Urban system » is now in development, basing the interdisciplinary approach on the CS-DC Road-Map grid. It seems very useful and relevant in this implementation stage.
I would help to develop other programs in this perspective\[Ellipsis]
'''André TINDANO, Director General of CARFS (African Center for Research and Training in Synecoculture)'''
What motivates me to aspire to the position of member of the executive committee of CS DC is my long term participation in the promotion of sustainable development and my commitment to the sharing of knowledge and expertise.
My research interests Sustainable agriculture, ecology, nutrition, life science. I have a strong experience in:
* Administration and management of development projects and programs;
* Accompaniment of associations and groups;
* Technical capacity building (animation of training sessions and reflection workshops).
* Action research;
* Sociological, socio-economic and economic studies.
* Development of development projects and programs;
* Training of trainers
* Results Based Management Training (RBM)
* Monitoring and evaluation of development programs and projects;
* Management of programs and development projects;
* Institutional development and organizational strengthening;
* Development and implementation of training / awareness / animation program;
* Very good knowledge of participatory methods
'''Guiou KOBAYASHI, Associate Professor at Federal University of ABC in São Paulo State, Brazil. '''
I worked with fault-tolerant computer systems for nuclear power plants and Metro signaling systems and recently my interests have evolved to resilience properties of Complex Systems. Traditionally, redundancy was the main feature for fault-tolerant and fail-safe systems, but the adaptability and the evolution of Complex Systems are the key elements for the resilience of these systems. How to characterize, design and implement these key elements in our future resilient systems? The Complex System - Digital Campus (CS-DC) is a way to create a world-wide community of researchers, philosophers and students to promote and discuss this kind of questions involving Complex Systems. For me, participating in its foundation was a great honor and I am very glad for the opportunity that I have had to contribute since 2012 in the consolidation of CS-DC.
Through this manifest I am applying to be one of the members of the new CS-DC's Executive Committee. I would like to help just a little more to strengthen and structure this fantastic community through which I had the opportunity to meet important people with very interesting works that expanded my knowledge of Complex Systems. Although my University and my personal contribution for CS-DC are very limited and small, I hope to continue to work with this great team.
'''Pierre COLLET, Professor of Computer Science, University of Strasbourg, France. Co-coordinator of the CS-DC UNESCO UniTwin'''
The CS-DC initiated by Paul Bourgine, Jeffrey Johnson, Cyrille Bertelle and many others has been an extraordinary adventure a) to instantiate as a UNESCO UniTwin and b) to develop and run since it was enacted in July 2014. Many a night have been spent on designing its inner workings, so that it can deliver an effective affordance for the scientists who wish to develop the science and teaching of Complex Systems. Indeed, many projects seeded in the CS-DC have come to fruition, showing the enormous potential of this fertile environment not only for research, but also for teaching: the BBB rooms set up by the CS-DC have not only made it possible for the CS-DC to organize conferences, but have also shown their potential as remote teaching rooms in many Universities around the world.
It has been an honour for me to be part of the development of the CS-DC since its beginning, but so much remains to be done!
In this manifesto, I hereby express my strong desire to continue developing the CS-DC in these trying times, when the effects of the pandemics stretch thin the social links that our research and teaching communities need most. My objectives for this new mandate are not only to deliver a new world conference (originally planned in 2020 but unfortunately delayed due to the high toll imposed on us all, teachers and researchers alike, by COVID-19) but also continue on developing not only efficient complex computational ecosystems (cheap powerful PARSEC machines have been installed in several universities) but more specifically remote teaching environments based on complex systems, to mitigate the terrible impact of the pandemic on face to face education, within the POEM CS-DC flagship, on which Paul Bourgine and myself have been working for many years now..
'''Mariana C. BROENS, Professor - UNESP - BRAZIL.'''
As members of the Executive Committee, our main challenge will be to raise, analyse and to discuss possible positive/negative ethical and political implications of the further development of the Complex Systems Science, and their application on studies of everyday social problems. In particular, We believe that the widespread use of complex system models and Big Data analytics can bring important questions about people's privacy, personal and corporate responsibility, widespread surveillance by public or private institutions, among many others, that should be deeply discussed in our community. Our contribution will be to raise and deepen these discussions from an interdisciplinary perspective.
'''Cyrille Bertelle, Professor in Computer Sciences, University Le Havre, France, co-coordinator of the CS-DC UNESCO UniTwin'''
I am a candidate for the CS-DC Executive Committee to represent the University of Le Havre
Normandy, which is co-coordinator with the University of Strasbourg of the convention of
recognition of the CS-DC as UniTwin by UNESCO. The University of Le Havre has made
available to the community, resources and skills to provide digital collaborative tools for the
organization of the Councils and the CS-DC'15 virtual conference.
The objective I wish to take is to facilitate the involvement of member universities not only
by their representatives on the council but by allowing researchers from these member
institutions to join concrete and accessible actions.
Co-responsible in the past of a master's degree on complex systems and then of the creation
of the institute on complex systems in Normandie (France) in a multidisciplinary framework,
I have participated in the setting up of the project labeled by the French national program of
investments for the future and entitled "Smart Port City". The aim is to think about the
future of territories in a sustainable development approach supported by new technologies
and concerned about the environment and the well-being of their citizens. My research skills
are focused on implementing the complexity of complex dynamic systems and networks,
crossing behavioral scales from the interaction of human behaviors to the technical
networks of the territory.
The book "complex systems, smart territories and mobility" from
the Springer's Understanding Complex Systems series, which will be published in January
2021 (https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030593018) illustrates the research
coordination actions that I lead in these fields.
'''Slimane Ben Miled, Senior Researcher at Pasteur Institute of Tunis, Professor at ENIT'''
Our Tunisian consortium want to constitute a collaborative Research Training Programs to increase data science capacity related to health research in Africa by building trainings and enhancing institutional capacity at African academic institutions.
The academy/project is based on 4 pillars to build a training ecosystem for Data and Engineering Science in health.
# A platform of federated master’s programs with à la carte optional courses covering informatics/computer science, biomedical informatics, data science, statistics, and public health). Each program will keep its independence, with a mention to the academy label, and this platform will allow to enrich the training with optional modules, seminars, and courses in the partner institutions. New curricula will be created in relation to ethical issues.
# Network of Doctoral programs and Executive programs
# Platform of federated Business incubator and a career center offers training, support and funding for projects related to the project’s topic.
This challenge is in perfect agreement with the Sustainable Development Goal 3 and the CS-DC flagship PHYSIOMES (Personalized Health phYSIcally, sOcially and Mentally for Each in their networkS).
'''Masa Funabashi: researcher of open complex systems at Sony Computer Science Laboratories, Inc.'''
I would like to contribute to the executive committee of CS-DC on the following two pillars:
* Promote the FOOD (From smart agrOecOnomy to smart fooD) flagship project that aims to resolve the health-diet-environment trilemma through the promotion of sustainable food systems, in collaboration with the e-lab "human augmentation of ecosystems" members institution: Sony CSL, Synecoculture Association, CARFS, and those who wish to participate in CS-DC collaboration.
* Construct a basic e-learning content on Synecoculture and ecological literacy as a part of CS-DC MOOCs and perform initial trials, principally in ECOWAS countries, through the Sony CSL-CARFS collaboration.
Through the development of on-going activities in FOOD project and making synergy with other flagship projects, I would like to contribute CS-DC as a member of the executive committee and realize further extension toward the achievement of global sustainability goals such as SDGs.
'''Dr Mohamed Abdellahi (Ould BABAH) Ebbe, Mauritania, '''
* General Director of the Institut du Sahel/CILSS www.insah.org;
* Executive Director of the Orthopterist Society (400 researchers among the globe) https://orthsoc.org/
By obtaining the honor of having your hoped-for confidence for this post of member of the executive council of the CS-DC, I will work, in priority and in the short term on two main subjects:
# '''The transboundary plague of the Desert Locust (Schistocerca gregaria (Forska l , 1775))''' This plague of the Desert Locust of more than 3000 years that cites all our holy books (the Tourah, the Bible and the Koran) and which continues to be present to this day and to wreak devastating devastation. In case of invasion, it can affect the agriculture and pastures of about 25 countries including those of the poorest countries of the world, from Mauritania to India, while its best and most effective strategy of struggle is preventive struggle by targeting its first centers of gregarization which are very small in space and much better known today. In 2005, the costs of its struggle in the Sahel and North Africa amounted to half a billion dollars, with 8 million farmers and pastoralists affected in the Sahel. It also massively invaded Asia and Africa. 'East Africa in 2020. On this subject, I have spent 30 years studying and fighting and developing a national strategy against this scourge which has made it possible to establish a whole prevention model and an institutional, technical, operational mechanism. and scientific effective in my country that can be adapted and copied and in all other affected countries: Biogeography of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria, Forskal, 1775: Identification, characterization and originality of a gregarious focus in central Mauritania (HR.HORS COLLEC.) (French Edition) - Babah Ebbe, Mohamed Abdallahi | 9782705670573 | Amazon.com.au | Books http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2010/01/07/improved-ways-to-prevent-the-desert-locust-in-mauritania-and-the-sahel, http: // whatsnext.blogs.cnn.com/2012/02/02/in-mauritania-sunny-with-a-chance-of-locusts/
# '''The Sahel Institute (INSAH) www.insah.org of the Permanent Interstate Committee for Drought Control (CILSS)''' that I lead and which has been doing extraordinary work for almost half a century in the field of research and development of animal and plant production techniques and also in the field of support for demographic, population and development policies, in favor of the populations of our 13 Sahelian, coastal and island member countries. This work covered the majority of good practice technologies in the field of plant and animal production, natural resource management, land restauration, cultivation techniques, post-harvest, machining, dehulling operations technology. / ginning, Conservation and storage, good resilience practices
Research on the demographic dividend, gender and the empowerment of women and the Population / Development interrelations ... etc
The results of all this work are contained in a database. data, online http://publications.insah.org/, containing more than 1,500 books, scientific and technical articles that will have to be modernized and connected to the CS Meta data.
Finally, I will work actively with my colleagues on the Executive Board on all aspects of other cross-border scourges but also all aspects of improving agro-sylvo-pastoral production tools as well as the fight against poverty and food insecurity and nutrition in line with the goals (SDGs)
'''Dr. Habil. László Barna Iantovics, Associate Professor at “George Emil Palade” University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures, Romania.'''
With the present manifesto, I would like to candidate as a member of the CS-DC Executive Committee. I am the representative of “George Emil Palade” University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures from Romania in CS-DC.
Some of my research and academic activities are related to the complex systems, including: publications, organization of conferences (e.g. Symposium on Understanding Intelligent and Complex Systems - UICS 2009; 1st Int. Conf. on Complexity and Intelligence of the Artificial and Natural Complex Systems Medical Applications of the Complex Systems. Biomedical Computing -CANS 2008; 1st Int. Conf. on Bio-Inspired Computational Methods Used for Difficult Problems Solving. Development of Intelligent and Complex Systems - BICS 2008), contribution to conference committees (e.g. Int. Conf. Emergent Proprieties in Natural and Artificial Complex Systems - EPNACS 2007; Workshop on Complex Systems and Self-organization Modeling -CoSSoM 2009), preparing journal special issues (e.g. Special Issue on Complexity in Sciences and Artificial Intelligence; Special Issue on Understanding Complex Systems), participating in journal’s editorial board (e.g. Complex Adaptive Systems Modeling -CASM, SpringerOpen), and contribution to research in projects and projects coordination (Social network of machines- SOON; Hybrid Medical Complex Systems -ComplexMediSys). I was the director of the center Advanced Computational Technologies – AdvCompTech in the frame of my university. At present, I am the director of the Center for Advanced Research in Information Technology from my university.
I would like much deeper involve myself in the life and activities of the CS-DC community.
My objectives:
* To involve junior and senior researchers from my university in activities regarding research and education. To motivate universities and research institutes from my country to contribute to CS-DC. I consider also universities and research institutes with that I have collaboration in the past.
* To PROPOSE the formation of a so-called doctoral and postdoctoral students group. In the case of doctoral and postdoctoral students probably in time more students would like to be involved in activities. In this framework, I suggest the organization yearly 3 times (from 4 to 4 months) workshops in that all the interested students could discuss, present their research and research in progress. With this occasion in the frame of workshops if there is interest could be established separate sessions with presentations also by B.Sc. and M.Sc. students.
* To PROPOSE the strengthening of the following research direction with the general topic: intelligent complex systems and machine intelligence measuring. One of the subtopic by interest will be complex systems approaches in medicine and healthcare. To be accomplishable this subject I propose in a first step the formation of a group of interested persons, after then the establishment of the functionality of the group, for example: discussions when are subjects that should be discussed etc.
==Elected members to the Executive Committee & as (Deputy-)Presidents==
'''Jeffrey JOHNSON, Professor of Complexity Science and Design, The Open University, UK'''
I offer myself as a candidate both to be President and to the Executive Committee of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC) so that I can help to drive it forward to achieve it goals.
I am particularly committed to our educational efforts. I have made four MOOCs on the FutureLearn Platform for CS-DC ( https://www.futurelearn.com/partners/unesco-unitwin-complex-systems-digital-campus ): Global Systems Science (2015-16); Systems Thinking and Complexity (2017-18); First Steps in Data Science with Google Analytics (2018-19) and COVID-19 - Pandemics, Modelling and Policy (2020). CS-DC has a great opportunity to become the global university providing interdisciplinary education for a better world.
I am also committed to our research mission with UNESCO towards the achieving the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals. My own research on representing the dynamics of complex multilevel systems is relevant to many of the research initiatives of CS-DC.
I have extensive experience working within the complex systems community. I have run various coordination actions supporting research programmes funded by the European Commission, I am a founder member and past president of the Complex Systems Society, and I am Deputy-President of the CS-DC. I believe this experience will enable me to make a significant contribution the CS-DC over the next three years.
'''Paul BOURGINE, present President of the UNESCO UniTwin CS-DC, Complex Systems Institute of Paris'''
I offer myself as a candidate both to be President and to the Executive Committee of The UNESCO UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus (CS-DC).
If elected, my main commitment is to create the conditions for a self-organized development of our UniTwin UNESCO CS-DC as autonomous communities of communities. This self-similar development will be the case both for the two main branches the UniTwin branch of our institutional members and the global eCampus branches of our individual scientific members:
* for the UniTwin branch, the communities of communities are a territorial cascade with Smart Continents, smart countries, smart cities for their sustainable development according our flagship TIMES (Territorial Intelligence for Multilevel Equity and Sustainability). The roadmap is always the same, i.e. the cascade of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals and their 169 Targets: but their relative importance and coherence within this cascade vary from one territory to the others. The institutional members of the UniTwin branch have signed their agreement with the Cooperation Programme signed with UNESCO. In 2021, the CS-DC will ask for a cascade of agreements inside each institutional member, in order to have a "one for all" amplification within the other branch, the e-campus branch.
* for the eCampus branch, the cascade of communities is along the refinement cascades when studying the theoretical and experimental challenges of complex systems. With Smart Continents'21, scientists are proposing their individual challenges that enact basic communities and communities of communities within the e-departments. In the "all for one" return, the roadmap of each university is the cascade of roadmaps within the eCampus where the University has at least one member. Furthermore each community can organise a monthly e-seminar or e-session in workshop as well as in CS-DC'21 for recorded advanced introductions. Such advanced introductions can be the basis for curriculum largely shared by the set of Universities having members in the community cascade of the curriculum.
This "accelerator of knowledge and knowhow one for all and all for one" will first benefit to the student curriculum through the flagship POEM (Personalized Open Education for the Masses). This accelerator can be extended through the flagship POLE (Personalized Open Lifelong Education) for a lifelong education. This extended accelerator will be open to all, independently of previously achieved academic levels, respectful of the diversity of social and cultural environments and in a higher and higher inclusive way including refugees, migrants and primary people. genders, religions or ways of life.
mro4eilttcxor73v4vmyd2riouduzu7
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=== Introduction ===
* Overview ([[Media:C01.Intro1.Overview.1.A.20170925.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C01.Intro1.Overview.1.B.20170901.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:C01.Intro1.Overview.1.C.20170904.pdf |C.pdf]])
* Number System ([[Media:C01.Intro2.Number.1.A.20171023.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C01.Intro2.Number.1.B.20170909.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:C01.Intro2.Number.1.C.20170914.pdf |C.pdf]])
* Memory System ([[Media:C01.Intro2.Memory.1.A.20170907.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C01.Intro3.Memory.1.B.20170909.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:C01.Intro3.Memory.1.C.20170914.pdf |C.pdf]])
=== Handling Repetition ===
* Control ([[Media:C02.Repeat1.Control.1.A.20170925.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C02.Repeat1.Control.1.B.20170918.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:C02.Repeat1.Control.1.C.20170926.pdf |C.pdf]])
* Loop ([[Media:C02.Repeat2.Loop.1.A.20170925.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C02.Repeat2.Loop.1.B.20170918.pdf |B.pdf]])
=== Handling a Big Work ===
* Function Overview ([[Media:C03.Func1.Overview.1.A.20171030.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C03.Func1.Oerview.1.B.20161022.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Functions & Variables ([[Media:C03.Func2.Variable.1.A.20161222.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C03.Func2.Variable.1.B.20161222.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Functions & Pointers ([[Media:C03.Func3.Pointer.1.A.20161122.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C03.Func3.Pointer.1.B.20161122.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Functions & Recursions ([[Media:C03.Func4.Recursion.1.A.20161214.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C03.Func4.Recursion.1.B.20161214.pdf |B.pdf]])
=== Handling Series of Data ===
==== Background ====
* Background ([[Media:C04.Series0.Background.1.A.20180727.pdf |A.pdf]])
==== Basics ====
* Pointers ([[Media:C04.S1.Pointer.1A.20240524.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series2.Pointer.1.B.20161115.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Arrays ([[Media:C04.S2.Array.1A.20240514.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series1.Array.1.B.20161115.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Array Pointers ([[Media:C04.S3.ArrayPointer.1A.20240208.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series3.ArrayPointer.1.B.20181203.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Multi-dimensional Arrays ([[Media:C04.Series4.MultiDim.1.A.20221130.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series4.MultiDim.1.B.1111.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Array Access Methods ([[Media:C04.Series4.ArrayAccess.1.A.20190511.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series3.ArrayPointer.1.B.20181203.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Structures ([[Media:C04.Series3.Structure.1.A.20171204.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series2.Structure.1.B.20161130.pdf |B.pdf]])
==== Examples ====
* Spreadsheet Example Programs
:: Example 1 ([[Media:C04.Series7.Example.1.A.20171213.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series7.Example.1.C.20171213.pdf |C.pdf]])
:: Example 2 ([[Media:C04.Series7.Example.2.A.20171213.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series7.Example.2.C.20171213.pdf |C.pdf]])
:: Example 3 ([[Media:C04.Series7.Example.3.A.20171213.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C04.Series7.Example.3.C.20171213.pdf |C.pdf]])
:: Bubble Sort ([[Media:C04.Series7.BubbleSort.1.A.20171211.pdf |A.pdf]])
==== Applications ====
* Address-of and de-reference operators ([[Media:C04.SA0.PtrOperator.1A.20260513.pdf |A.pdf]])
* Applications of Pointers ([[Media:C04.SA1.AppPointer.1A.20241121.pdf |A.pdf]])
* Applications of Arrays ([[Media:C04.SA2.AppArray.1A.20240715.pdf |A.pdf]])
* Applications of Array Pointers ([[Media:C04.SA3.AppArrayPointer.1A.20240210.pdf |A.pdf]])
* Applications of Multi-dimensional Arrays ([[Media:C04.Series4App.MultiDim.1.A.20210719.pdf |A.pdf]])
* Applications of Array Access Methods ([[Media:C04.Series9.AppArrAcess.1.A.20190511.pdf |A.pdf]])
* Applications of Structures ([[Media:C04.Series6.AppStruct.1.A.20190423.pdf |A.pdf]])
=== Handling Various Kinds of Data ===
* Types ([[Media:C05.Data1.Type.1.A.20180217.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C05.Data1.Type.1.B.20161212.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Typecasts ([[Media:C05.Data2.TypeCast.1.A.20180217.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C05.Data2.TypeCast.1.B.20161216.pdf |A.pdf]])
* Operators ([[Media:C05.Data3.Operators.1.A.20161219.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C05.Data3.Operators.1.B.20161216.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Files ([[Media:C05.Data4.File.1.A.20161124.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:C05.Data4.File.1.B.20161212.pdf |B.pdf]])
=== Handling Low Level Operations ===
* Bitwise Operations ([[Media:BitOp.1.B.20161214.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:BitOp.1.B.20161203.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Bit Field ([[Media:BitField.1.A.20161214.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:BitField.1.B.20161202.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Union ([[Media:Union.1.A.20161221.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Union.1.B.20161111.pdf |B.pdf]])
* Accessing IO Registers ([[Media:IO.1.A.20141215.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:IO.1.B.20161217.pdf |B.pdf]])
=== Declarations ===
* Type Specifiers and Qualifiers ([[Media:C07.Spec1.Type.1.A.20171004.pdf |pdf]])
* Storage Class Specifiers ([[Media:C07.Spec2.Storage.1.A.20171009.pdf |pdf]])
* Scope
=== Class Notes ===
* TOC ([[Media:TOC.20171007.pdf |TOC.pdf]])
* Day01 ([[Media:Day01.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day01.B.20171209.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day01.C.20171211.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Introduction (1) Standard Library
* Day02 ([[Media:Day02.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day02.B.20171209.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day02.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Introduction (2) Basic Elements
* Day03 ([[Media:Day03.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day03.B.20170908.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day03.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Introduction (3) Numbers
* Day04 ([[Media:Day04.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day04.B.20170915.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day04.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Structured Programming (1) Flowcharts
* Day05 ([[Media:Day05.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day05.B.20170915.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day05.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Structured Programming (2) Conditions and Loops
* Day06 ([[Media:Day06.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day06.B.20170923.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day06.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Program Control
* Day07 ([[Media:Day07.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day07.B.20170926.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day07.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Function (1) Definitions
* Day08 ([[Media:Day08.A.20171028.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day08.B.20171016.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day08.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Function (2) Storage Class and Scope
* Day09 ([[Media:Day09.A.20171007.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day09.B.20171017.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day09.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Function (3) Recursion
* Day10 ([[Media:Day10.A.20171209.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day10.B.20171017.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day10.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Arrays (1) Definitions
* Day11 ([[Media:Day11.A.20171024.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day11.B.20171017.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day11.C.20171212.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Arrays (2) Applications
* Day12 ([[Media:Day12.A.20171024.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day12.B.20171020.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day12.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Pointers (1) Definitions
* Day13 ([[Media:Day13.A.20171025.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day13.B.20171024.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day13.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Pointers (2) Applications
* Day14 ([[Media:Day14.A.20171226.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day14.B.20171101.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day14.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... C String (1)
* Day15 ([[Media:Day15.A.20171209.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day15.B.20171124.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day15.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... C String (2)
* Day16 ([[Media:Day16.A.20171208.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day16.B.20171114.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day16.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... C Formatted IO
* Day17 ([[Media:Day17.A.20171031.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day17.B.20171111.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day17.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Structure (1) Definitions
* Day18 ([[Media:Day18.A.20171206.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day18.B.20171128.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day18.C.20171212.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Structure (2) Applications
* Day19 ([[Media:Day19.A.20171205.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day19.B.20171121.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day19.C.20171209.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Union, Bitwise Operators, Enum
* Day20 ([[Media:Day20.A.20171205.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day20.B.20171201.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day20.C.20171212.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Linked List
* Day21 ([[Media:Day21.A.20171206.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day21.B.20171208.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day21.C.20171212.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... File Processing
* Day22 ([[Media:Day22.A.20171212.pdf |A.pdf]], [[Media:Day22.B.20171213.pdf |B.pdf]], [[Media:Day22.C.20171212.pdf |C.pdf]]) ...... Preprocessing
<!---------------------------------------------------------------------->
</br>
See also https://cprogramex.wordpress.com/
== '''Old Materials '''==
until 201201
* Intro.Overview.1.A ([[Media:C.Intro.Overview.1.A.20120107.pdf |pdf]])
* Intro.Memory.1.A ([[Media:C.Intro.Memory.1.A.20120107.pdf |pdf]])
* Intro.Number.1.A ([[Media:C.Intro.Number.1.A.20120107.pdf |pdf]])
* Repeat.Control.1.A ([[Media:C.Repeat.Control.1.A.20120109.pdf |pdf]])
* Repeat.Loop.1.A ([[Media:C.Repeat.Loop.1.A.20120113.pdf |pdf]])
* Work.Function.1.A ([[Media:C.Work.Function.1.A.20120117.pdf |pdf]])
* Work.Scope.1.A ([[Media:C.Work.Scope.1.A.20120117.pdf |pdf]])
* Series.Array.1.A ([[Media:Series.Array.1.A.20110718.pdf |pdf]])
* Series.Pointer.1.A ([[Media:Series.Pointer.1.A.20110719.pdf |pdf]])
* Series.Structure.1.A ([[Media:Series.Structure.1.A.20110805.pdf |pdf]])
* Data.Type.1.A ([[Media:C05.Data2.TypeCast.1.A.20130813.pdf |pdf]])
* Data.TypeCast.1.A ([[Media:Data.TypeCast.1.A.pdf |pdf]])
* Data.Operators.1.A ([[Media:Data.Operators.1.A.20110712.pdf |pdf]])
<br>
until 201107
* Intro.1.A ([[Media:Intro.1.A.pdf |pdf]])
* Control.1.A ([[Media:Control.1.A.20110706.pdf |pdf]])
* Iteration.1.A ([[Media:Iteration.1.A.pdf |pdf]])
* Function.1.A ([[Media:Function.1.A.20110705.pdf |pdf]])
* Variable.1.A ([[Media:Variable.1.A.20110708.pdf |pdf]])
* Operators.1.A ([[Media:Operators.1.A.20110712.pdf |pdf]])
* Pointer.1.A ([[Media:Pointer.1.A.pdf |pdf]])
* Pointer.2.A ([[Media:Pointer.2.A.pdf |pdf]])
* Array.1.A ([[Media:Array.1.A.pdf |pdf]])
* Type.1.A ([[Media:Type.1.A.pdf |pdf]])
* Structure.1.A ([[Media:Structure.1.A.pdf |pdf]])
go to [ [[C programming in plain view]] ]
[[Category:C programming language]]
</br>
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Removing [[:c:File:NZ-Option1.png|NZ-Option1.png]], it has been deleted from Commons by [[:c:User:Polarlys|Polarlys]] because: per [[:c:Commons:Deletion requests/File:NZ-Option1.png|]].
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== About Me ==
Hi, my name is Jorja. I am a [[w:Psychology|Psychology]] student (undergrad) at [http://www.canberra.edu.au University of Canberra].[[File:Happiness .jpg|thumb|I am happy when I understand things.|165x165px]]<blockquote>I love understanding how things work.</blockquote>
=== Interests ===
* Residential Building and Construction (Class 1a and Class 10a structures)
* Cosmetic and Structural Renovations
* Healthy Lifestyle Choices
* Systems - what works, what doesn't, and how to improve them
=== AI Generated Images ===
{| class="wikitable"
|+ <big>'''From Robbie's [https://chat.openai.com/share/0fca18e6-d721-41b5-9c23-716f3a7e58a0 prompt]'''</big>
|-
| || [[File:NZ-Option2.png|thumb|left|Option 2: NZ-Option2.png]]
|-
| ||
|}
Option 3 and Option 4 may no longer be visible after April 2025 due to Wiki Commons feedback and user request for deletion.
<br>
== Book Chapter ==
''[[Motivation and emotion/Book/2023/Flourishing in the elderly|Flourishing in the elderly]]'' for the unit [[Motivation and emotion|'''Motivation and Emotion''']], Semester 2 of 2023
== Professional Profile ==
I have the beginnings of an ePortfolio which I completed during semester 1/2021 for the unit [https://www.canberra.edu.au/unit/11474/1/2024 Professional Orientation (Psychology)].
[https://portfolio.canberra.edu.au/view/view.php?id=341468 Cover letter + resume + five-year plan]
== '''Social Contributions''' ==
[[File:Optics stub.png|thumb]]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/279400 Responded to a discussion forum post]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/278624 Participated in student survey]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FAssessment%2FTopic%2FChecklist&diff=2548094&oldid=2547290 Corrected typo in topic development checklist]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FBasal_ganglia_and_motivation&diff=2548098&oldid=2548097 Used code to create page, then added title and subtitle]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FTo-do_lists&diff=2548114&oldid=2548051 Corrected typo and grammar for to-do lists chapter]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AMotivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FAgeing_and_motivation&diff=2548131&oldid=2545225 Offered four reference article suggestions for ageing and motivation chapter]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FFreedom_and_motivation&diff=2559978&oldid=2559480 Applied APA7 formatting to reference list]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/287379 Participated in student survey]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/287873 Posted a discussion forum topic about using AI for customised image creation]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FFreedom_and_motivation&diff=2560296&oldid=2559978 Edit of chapter for grammar, cohesion, comma use, ownership etc]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Motivation_and_emotion/Book/2023/Freedom_and_motivation&action=edit§ion=3 Provided feedback on discuss tab for potential book chapter improvements ]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/281807 Added a query to discussion topic to clarify use of Australian spelling]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/286615 Added an info graphic on discussion forum topic for correct use of commas (authored by Studiosity) ]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/288462 Responded to a discussion forum post]; and [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FDeath_and_meaning_in_life&diff=2562019&oldid=2562008 Repositioned and resized an image as requested by chapter author]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/287873 Responded to a discussion forum post]; and [https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/User:JorjaFive#AI_Generated_Images Generated AI images from a prompt supplied by chapter author]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FFreedom_and_motivation&diff=2562188&oldid=2561830 Added an en-dash to separate page numbers in reference list]; and [https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Talk:Motivation_and_emotion/Book/2023/Freedom_and_motivation#Chapter_Edits Added an explanation on discuss tab]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AMotivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FCommunity_resilience&diff=2563535&oldid=2558162 Provided feedback on discuss tab for tweaking figure captions]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FBrief_motivational_interviewing_as_a_health_intervention&diff=2565421&oldid=2565383 Minor edit to references section for en-dashes]; and [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FBrief_motivational_interviewing_as_a_health_intervention&diff=2566716&oldid=2566418 Minor edits for spacing and commas]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FBrief_motivational_interviewing_as_a_health_intervention&diff=2567207&oldid=2567073 Edit chapter for commas, in-text references, typos]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2023%2FFreedom_and_motivation&diff=2567266&oldid=2566038 Minor grammar corrections]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/289395 Participated in student survey]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2019%2FEmotional_abuse&diff=2569290&oldid=2436101 Grammar corrections for book chapter]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2019%2FFood_and_fear&diff=2569295&oldid=2089328 Spelling corrections for book chapter]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2019%2FOpioid_system_and_human_emotion&diff=2569303&oldid=2333767 Grammar corrections for book chapter]
# [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Motivation_and_emotion%2FBook%2F2019%2FSocial_support_and_emotion&diff=2569306&oldid=2333381 Grammar and spelling corrections for book chapter]
# [https://uclearn.canberra.edu.au/courses/13238/discussion_topics/291416 Responded to a discussion forum post]
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== Adoni ==
@ [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28990-64|~2026-28990-64]] ([[User talk:~2026-28990-64|talk]]) 21:01, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
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@ [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28990-64|~2026-28990-64]] ([[User talk:~2026-28990-64|talk]]) 21:01, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Adoni ==
@ [[Special:Contributions/~2026-28990-64|~2026-28990-64]] ([[User talk:~2026-28990-64|talk]]) 21:02, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
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==Welcome==
{{Robelbox|theme=9|title='''[[Wikiversity:Welcome|Welcome]] to [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity|Wikiversity]], Codename Noreste!'''|width=100%}}
<div style="{{Robelbox/pad}}">
You can [[Wikiversity:Contact|contact us]] with [[Wikiversity:Questions|questions]] at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]] or get in touch with [[User talk:Jtneill|me personally]] if you would like some [[Help:Contents|help]].
Remember to [[Wikiversity:Signature#How to add your signature|sign]] your comments when [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|participating]] in [[Wikiversity:Talk page|discussions]]. Using the signature icon [[File:OOjs UI icon signature-ltr.svg]] makes it simple.
We invite you to [[Wikiversity:Be bold|be bold]] and [[Wikiversity|assume good faith]]. Please abide by our [[Wikiversity:Civility|civility]], [[Wikiversity:Privacy policy|privacy]], and [[Foundation:Terms of Use|terms of use]] policies.
To find your way around, check out:
<!-- The Left column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction|Introduction to Wikiversity]]
* [[Help:Guides|Take a guided tour]] and learn [[Help:Editing|how to edit]]
* [[Wikiversity:Browse|Browse]] or visit an educational level portal:<br>[[Portal:Pre-school Education|pre-school]] | [[Portal:Primary Education|primary]] | [[Portal:Secondary Education|secondary]] | [[Portal:Tertiary Education|tertiary]] | [[Portal:Non-formal Education|non-formal]]
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction explore|Explore]] links in left-hand navigation menu
</div>
<!-- The Right column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* Read an [[Wikiversity:Wikiversity teachers|introduction for teachers]]
* Learn [[Help:How to write an educational resource|how to write an educational resource]]
* Find out about [[Wikiversity:Research|research]] activities
* Give [[Wikiversity:Feedback|feedback]] about your observations
* Discuss issues or ask questions at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]]
</div>
<br clear="both"/>
To get started, experiment in the [[wikiversity:sandbox|sandbox]] or on [[special:mypage|your userpage]].
See you around Wikiversity! ---- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:39, 24 March 2026 (UTC)</div>
<!-- Template:Welcome -->
{{Robelbox/close}}
== [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste]] ==
I have closed this as successful. Please reach out if you have any questions. Congrats! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 18:47, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
Congratulations. Please add yourself to [[Wikiversity:Staff]]. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:29, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], {{done|[[Special:Diff/2802052|done]]}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:59, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Abusefilters ==
Thanks for pointing me to abuse filters. Now I can see, that they bring whole new agenda. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:58, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, custodians can see local private abuse filters, and I am a global abuse filter helper, so I can teach you about abuse filters, if needed [[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:16, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Hi ==
Hi, I'm from Wikibooks. I was just wondering how the draft on my [[User:2005-Fan|userpage]] for a Pokemon-based project on here (and potentially more video games) since I want stable resources to contribute gaming knowledge, and I was informed of this website.
Admittedly I used Anthropic to help make the draft., but I just wanted to see what the policies and your opinion is. [[User:2005-Fan|2005-Fan]] ([[User talk:2005-Fan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/2005-Fan|contribs]]) 16:09, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
: Hello, I believe MathXplore has responded to your question(s) per [[User talk:MathXplore#c-MathXplore-20260414121900-2005-Fan-20260413234100]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:13, 14 April 2026 (UTC)
==Interface administrator==
You are now an [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] for 120 days. Thanks for your willingness to improve the English Wikiversity interface. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:39, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Curator rights ==
You have removed curator flag from [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. My point in the discussion was, that non of the pages is mentioning that they can give curator flag. So if it is technically posible for admins, that information, should probably be placed in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]. I am not doing that, because I dont know if it is a habit on en.wv. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:14, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
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==Welcome==
{{Robelbox|theme=9|title='''[[Wikiversity:Welcome|Welcome]] to [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity|Wikiversity]], Codename Noreste!'''|width=100%}}
<div style="{{Robelbox/pad}}">
You can [[Wikiversity:Contact|contact us]] with [[Wikiversity:Questions|questions]] at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]] or get in touch with [[User talk:Jtneill|me personally]] if you would like some [[Help:Contents|help]].
Remember to [[Wikiversity:Signature#How to add your signature|sign]] your comments when [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|participating]] in [[Wikiversity:Talk page|discussions]]. Using the signature icon [[File:OOjs UI icon signature-ltr.svg]] makes it simple.
We invite you to [[Wikiversity:Be bold|be bold]] and [[Wikiversity|assume good faith]]. Please abide by our [[Wikiversity:Civility|civility]], [[Wikiversity:Privacy policy|privacy]], and [[Foundation:Terms of Use|terms of use]] policies.
To find your way around, check out:
<!-- The Left column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction|Introduction to Wikiversity]]
* [[Help:Guides|Take a guided tour]] and learn [[Help:Editing|how to edit]]
* [[Wikiversity:Browse|Browse]] or visit an educational level portal:<br>[[Portal:Pre-school Education|pre-school]] | [[Portal:Primary Education|primary]] | [[Portal:Secondary Education|secondary]] | [[Portal:Tertiary Education|tertiary]] | [[Portal:Non-formal Education|non-formal]]
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction explore|Explore]] links in left-hand navigation menu
</div>
<!-- The Right column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* Read an [[Wikiversity:Wikiversity teachers|introduction for teachers]]
* Learn [[Help:How to write an educational resource|how to write an educational resource]]
* Find out about [[Wikiversity:Research|research]] activities
* Give [[Wikiversity:Feedback|feedback]] about your observations
* Discuss issues or ask questions at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]]
</div>
<br clear="both"/>
To get started, experiment in the [[wikiversity:sandbox|sandbox]] or on [[special:mypage|your userpage]].
See you around Wikiversity! ---- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:39, 24 March 2026 (UTC)</div>
<!-- Template:Welcome -->
{{Robelbox/close}}
== [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste]] ==
I have closed this as successful. Please reach out if you have any questions. Congrats! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 18:47, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
Congratulations. Please add yourself to [[Wikiversity:Staff]]. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:29, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], {{done|[[Special:Diff/2802052|done]]}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:59, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Abusefilters ==
Thanks for pointing me to abuse filters. Now I can see, that they bring whole new agenda. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:58, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, custodians can see local private abuse filters, and I am a global abuse filter helper, so I can teach you about abuse filters, if needed [[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:16, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Hi ==
Hi, I'm from Wikibooks. I was just wondering how the draft on my [[User:2005-Fan|userpage]] for a Pokemon-based project on here (and potentially more video games) since I want stable resources to contribute gaming knowledge, and I was informed of this website.
Admittedly I used Anthropic to help make the draft., but I just wanted to see what the policies and your opinion is. [[User:2005-Fan|2005-Fan]] ([[User talk:2005-Fan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/2005-Fan|contribs]]) 16:09, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
: Hello, I believe MathXplore has responded to your question(s) per [[User talk:MathXplore#c-MathXplore-20260414121900-2005-Fan-20260413234100]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:13, 14 April 2026 (UTC)
==Interface administrator==
You are now an [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] for 120 days. Thanks for your willingness to improve the English Wikiversity interface. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:39, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Curator rights ==
You have removed curator flag from [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. My point in the discussion was, that non of the pages is mentioning that they can give curator flag. So if it is technically posible for admins, that information, should probably be placed in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]. I am not doing that, because I dont know if it is a habit on en.wv. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:14, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
: See [[Special:Diff/2808912]]. Bold change, but I added information about which permissions custodians can grant and remove, but which permissions they cannot do. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
hiq22mnjtvalz513k57s2d4zhrbb27r
2808948
2808913
2026-05-13T21:32:35Z
BigKrow
3069766
/* Wikinews */ new section
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text/x-wiki
==Welcome==
{{Robelbox|theme=9|title='''[[Wikiversity:Welcome|Welcome]] to [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity|Wikiversity]], Codename Noreste!'''|width=100%}}
<div style="{{Robelbox/pad}}">
You can [[Wikiversity:Contact|contact us]] with [[Wikiversity:Questions|questions]] at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]] or get in touch with [[User talk:Jtneill|me personally]] if you would like some [[Help:Contents|help]].
Remember to [[Wikiversity:Signature#How to add your signature|sign]] your comments when [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|participating]] in [[Wikiversity:Talk page|discussions]]. Using the signature icon [[File:OOjs UI icon signature-ltr.svg]] makes it simple.
We invite you to [[Wikiversity:Be bold|be bold]] and [[Wikiversity|assume good faith]]. Please abide by our [[Wikiversity:Civility|civility]], [[Wikiversity:Privacy policy|privacy]], and [[Foundation:Terms of Use|terms of use]] policies.
To find your way around, check out:
<!-- The Left column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction|Introduction to Wikiversity]]
* [[Help:Guides|Take a guided tour]] and learn [[Help:Editing|how to edit]]
* [[Wikiversity:Browse|Browse]] or visit an educational level portal:<br>[[Portal:Pre-school Education|pre-school]] | [[Portal:Primary Education|primary]] | [[Portal:Secondary Education|secondary]] | [[Portal:Tertiary Education|tertiary]] | [[Portal:Non-formal Education|non-formal]]
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction explore|Explore]] links in left-hand navigation menu
</div>
<!-- The Right column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* Read an [[Wikiversity:Wikiversity teachers|introduction for teachers]]
* Learn [[Help:How to write an educational resource|how to write an educational resource]]
* Find out about [[Wikiversity:Research|research]] activities
* Give [[Wikiversity:Feedback|feedback]] about your observations
* Discuss issues or ask questions at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]]
</div>
<br clear="both"/>
To get started, experiment in the [[wikiversity:sandbox|sandbox]] or on [[special:mypage|your userpage]].
See you around Wikiversity! ---- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:39, 24 March 2026 (UTC)</div>
<!-- Template:Welcome -->
{{Robelbox/close}}
== [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste]] ==
I have closed this as successful. Please reach out if you have any questions. Congrats! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 18:47, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
Congratulations. Please add yourself to [[Wikiversity:Staff]]. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:29, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], {{done|[[Special:Diff/2802052|done]]}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:59, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Abusefilters ==
Thanks for pointing me to abuse filters. Now I can see, that they bring whole new agenda. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:58, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, custodians can see local private abuse filters, and I am a global abuse filter helper, so I can teach you about abuse filters, if needed [[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:16, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Hi ==
Hi, I'm from Wikibooks. I was just wondering how the draft on my [[User:2005-Fan|userpage]] for a Pokemon-based project on here (and potentially more video games) since I want stable resources to contribute gaming knowledge, and I was informed of this website.
Admittedly I used Anthropic to help make the draft., but I just wanted to see what the policies and your opinion is. [[User:2005-Fan|2005-Fan]] ([[User talk:2005-Fan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/2005-Fan|contribs]]) 16:09, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
: Hello, I believe MathXplore has responded to your question(s) per [[User talk:MathXplore#c-MathXplore-20260414121900-2005-Fan-20260413234100]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:13, 14 April 2026 (UTC)
==Interface administrator==
You are now an [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] for 120 days. Thanks for your willingness to improve the English Wikiversity interface. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:39, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Curator rights ==
You have removed curator flag from [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. My point in the discussion was, that non of the pages is mentioning that they can give curator flag. So if it is technically posible for admins, that information, should probably be placed in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]. I am not doing that, because I dont know if it is a habit on en.wv. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:14, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
: See [[Special:Diff/2808912]]. Bold change, but I added information about which permissions custodians can grant and remove, but which permissions they cannot do. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews ==
I want to write @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]], @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:32, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
szwnmbpju9h946ork2op8wsnbs7mov9
2808950
2808948
2026-05-13T21:54:31Z
Koavf
147
/* Wikinews */ Reply
2808950
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Welcome==
{{Robelbox|theme=9|title='''[[Wikiversity:Welcome|Welcome]] to [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity|Wikiversity]], Codename Noreste!'''|width=100%}}
<div style="{{Robelbox/pad}}">
You can [[Wikiversity:Contact|contact us]] with [[Wikiversity:Questions|questions]] at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]] or get in touch with [[User talk:Jtneill|me personally]] if you would like some [[Help:Contents|help]].
Remember to [[Wikiversity:Signature#How to add your signature|sign]] your comments when [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|participating]] in [[Wikiversity:Talk page|discussions]]. Using the signature icon [[File:OOjs UI icon signature-ltr.svg]] makes it simple.
We invite you to [[Wikiversity:Be bold|be bold]] and [[Wikiversity|assume good faith]]. Please abide by our [[Wikiversity:Civility|civility]], [[Wikiversity:Privacy policy|privacy]], and [[Foundation:Terms of Use|terms of use]] policies.
To find your way around, check out:
<!-- The Left column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction|Introduction to Wikiversity]]
* [[Help:Guides|Take a guided tour]] and learn [[Help:Editing|how to edit]]
* [[Wikiversity:Browse|Browse]] or visit an educational level portal:<br>[[Portal:Pre-school Education|pre-school]] | [[Portal:Primary Education|primary]] | [[Portal:Secondary Education|secondary]] | [[Portal:Tertiary Education|tertiary]] | [[Portal:Non-formal Education|non-formal]]
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction explore|Explore]] links in left-hand navigation menu
</div>
<!-- The Right column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* Read an [[Wikiversity:Wikiversity teachers|introduction for teachers]]
* Learn [[Help:How to write an educational resource|how to write an educational resource]]
* Find out about [[Wikiversity:Research|research]] activities
* Give [[Wikiversity:Feedback|feedback]] about your observations
* Discuss issues or ask questions at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]]
</div>
<br clear="both"/>
To get started, experiment in the [[wikiversity:sandbox|sandbox]] or on [[special:mypage|your userpage]].
See you around Wikiversity! ---- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:39, 24 March 2026 (UTC)</div>
<!-- Template:Welcome -->
{{Robelbox/close}}
== [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste]] ==
I have closed this as successful. Please reach out if you have any questions. Congrats! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 18:47, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
Congratulations. Please add yourself to [[Wikiversity:Staff]]. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:29, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], {{done|[[Special:Diff/2802052|done]]}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:59, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Abusefilters ==
Thanks for pointing me to abuse filters. Now I can see, that they bring whole new agenda. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:58, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, custodians can see local private abuse filters, and I am a global abuse filter helper, so I can teach you about abuse filters, if needed [[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:16, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Hi ==
Hi, I'm from Wikibooks. I was just wondering how the draft on my [[User:2005-Fan|userpage]] for a Pokemon-based project on here (and potentially more video games) since I want stable resources to contribute gaming knowledge, and I was informed of this website.
Admittedly I used Anthropic to help make the draft., but I just wanted to see what the policies and your opinion is. [[User:2005-Fan|2005-Fan]] ([[User talk:2005-Fan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/2005-Fan|contribs]]) 16:09, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
: Hello, I believe MathXplore has responded to your question(s) per [[User talk:MathXplore#c-MathXplore-20260414121900-2005-Fan-20260413234100]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:13, 14 April 2026 (UTC)
==Interface administrator==
You are now an [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] for 120 days. Thanks for your willingness to improve the English Wikiversity interface. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:39, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Curator rights ==
You have removed curator flag from [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. My point in the discussion was, that non of the pages is mentioning that they can give curator flag. So if it is technically posible for admins, that information, should probably be placed in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]. I am not doing that, because I dont know if it is a habit on en.wv. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:14, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
: See [[Special:Diff/2808912]]. Bold change, but I added information about which permissions custodians can grant and remove, but which permissions they cannot do. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews ==
I want to write @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]], @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:32, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:I encourage you to start working with the [[:Category:Journalism|existing journalism resources]] and propose general new-writing at [[Wikiversity:Colloquium]]. I would support the idea of en masse allowing Wikinews to be continued here, including a new namespace. I think that it's a valid continuing learning activity to see citizen journalism in practice. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:54, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
1z4762h0aj7gz0yiugkvnhx61fkskik
2808974
2808950
2026-05-13T23:01:57Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Curator rights */ Reply
2808974
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Welcome==
{{Robelbox|theme=9|title='''[[Wikiversity:Welcome|Welcome]] to [[Wikiversity:What is Wikiversity|Wikiversity]], Codename Noreste!'''|width=100%}}
<div style="{{Robelbox/pad}}">
You can [[Wikiversity:Contact|contact us]] with [[Wikiversity:Questions|questions]] at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]] or get in touch with [[User talk:Jtneill|me personally]] if you would like some [[Help:Contents|help]].
Remember to [[Wikiversity:Signature#How to add your signature|sign]] your comments when [[Wikiversity:Who are Wikiversity participants?|participating]] in [[Wikiversity:Talk page|discussions]]. Using the signature icon [[File:OOjs UI icon signature-ltr.svg]] makes it simple.
We invite you to [[Wikiversity:Be bold|be bold]] and [[Wikiversity|assume good faith]]. Please abide by our [[Wikiversity:Civility|civility]], [[Wikiversity:Privacy policy|privacy]], and [[Foundation:Terms of Use|terms of use]] policies.
To find your way around, check out:
<!-- The Left column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction|Introduction to Wikiversity]]
* [[Help:Guides|Take a guided tour]] and learn [[Help:Editing|how to edit]]
* [[Wikiversity:Browse|Browse]] or visit an educational level portal:<br>[[Portal:Pre-school Education|pre-school]] | [[Portal:Primary Education|primary]] | [[Portal:Secondary Education|secondary]] | [[Portal:Tertiary Education|tertiary]] | [[Portal:Non-formal Education|non-formal]]
* [[Wikiversity:Introduction explore|Explore]] links in left-hand navigation menu
</div>
<!-- The Right column -->
<div style="width:50.0%; float:left">
* Read an [[Wikiversity:Wikiversity teachers|introduction for teachers]]
* Learn [[Help:How to write an educational resource|how to write an educational resource]]
* Find out about [[Wikiversity:Research|research]] activities
* Give [[Wikiversity:Feedback|feedback]] about your observations
* Discuss issues or ask questions at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|colloquium]]
</div>
<br clear="both"/>
To get started, experiment in the [[wikiversity:sandbox|sandbox]] or on [[special:mypage|your userpage]].
See you around Wikiversity! ---- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 12:39, 24 March 2026 (UTC)</div>
<!-- Template:Welcome -->
{{Robelbox/close}}
== [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste]] ==
I have closed this as successful. Please reach out if you have any questions. Congrats! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 18:47, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
Congratulations. Please add yourself to [[Wikiversity:Staff]]. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 01:29, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]], {{done|[[Special:Diff/2802052|done]]}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 02:59, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Abusefilters ==
Thanks for pointing me to abuse filters. Now I can see, that they bring whole new agenda. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 17:58, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
:Yes, custodians can see local private abuse filters, and I am a global abuse filter helper, so I can teach you about abuse filters, if needed [[User:Juandev|Juandev]]. Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:16, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
== Hi ==
Hi, I'm from Wikibooks. I was just wondering how the draft on my [[User:2005-Fan|userpage]] for a Pokemon-based project on here (and potentially more video games) since I want stable resources to contribute gaming knowledge, and I was informed of this website.
Admittedly I used Anthropic to help make the draft., but I just wanted to see what the policies and your opinion is. [[User:2005-Fan|2005-Fan]] ([[User talk:2005-Fan|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/2005-Fan|contribs]]) 16:09, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
: Hello, I believe MathXplore has responded to your question(s) per [[User talk:MathXplore#c-MathXplore-20260414121900-2005-Fan-20260413234100]]. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:13, 14 April 2026 (UTC)
==Interface administrator==
You are now an [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] for 120 days. Thanks for your willingness to improve the English Wikiversity interface. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:39, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
== Curator rights ==
You have removed curator flag from [[Wikiversity:Bureaucratship]]. My point in the discussion was, that non of the pages is mentioning that they can give curator flag. So if it is technically posible for admins, that information, should probably be placed in [[Wikiversity:Custodianship]]. I am not doing that, because I dont know if it is a habit on en.wv. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 12:14, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
: See [[Special:Diff/2808912]]. Bold change, but I added information about which permissions custodians can grant and remove, but which permissions they cannot do. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:05, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::Yes, if you can improve the accuracy, clarity, and consistency of information on the curator, custodian, and bureaucrat policy/proposed policy pages, especially about user rights, please go ahead and do so. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 23:01, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
== Wikinews ==
I want to write @[[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]], @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 21:32, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
:I encourage you to start working with the [[:Category:Journalism|existing journalism resources]] and propose general new-writing at [[Wikiversity:Colloquium]]. I would support the idea of en masse allowing Wikinews to be continued here, including a new namespace. I think that it's a valid continuing learning activity to see citizen journalism in practice. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:54, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
ma1zgt4eqm524ta35mhi9o9jytqjd22
Universal Bibliography/Music
0
321521
2808927
2806328
2026-05-13T19:21:08Z
James500
297601
/* */ Add
2808927
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{Bibliography}}
See [[s:Category:Music]] and [[w:Category:Music books]]
This part of the [[Universal Bibliography]] is a bibliography of music.
Bibliography
*[[w:Bibliography of Music Literature|Bibliography of Music Literature]]
*Green (ed). Foundations in Music Bibliography. 1993. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=rADdpZN9UhAC&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Krummel. The Literature of Music Bibliography: An Account of the Writings on the History of Music Printing & Publishing. 2nd Ed: 1992. [https://books.google.com/books?id=3AZsiITI-IEC]
*Bibliography of Music Bibliographies. 1967. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=d6YJAQAAMAAJ]
*Bayne. A Guide to Library Research in Music. 2008. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ExGbDqu9gPAC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*A Selected Bibliography of Music Librarianship [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=X5AeOl4O-osC]
*Bradley. American Music Librarianship: A Research and Information Guide. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=VabcAAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Music Reference and Research Materials. 3rd Ed: 1974: [https://books.google.com/books?id=5Y1IAAAAMAAJ]
*Agruss. Guide to Reference Books on Music. 1948. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wX06AAAAIAAJ]
*Haggerty. A Guide to Popular Music Reference Books: An Annotated Bibliography. 1995. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2OnEEAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Coover. A Bibliography of Music Dictionaries. 1952: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=NH06AAAAIAAJ]. Music Lexicography. 2nd Ed: 1958. Including a Study of Lacunae in Music Lexicography and a Bibliography of Music Dictionaries. 3rd Ed: 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=jKMJAQAAMAAJ].
*A Bibliography of Books on Music and Collections of Music. 1948. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=vfvpnwWWlZwC]
*Deakin. Musical Bibliography: A Catalogue of the Musical Works. 1892. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-UgQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP7#v=onepage&q&f=false] (England 15th to 18th century)
*Matthew. The Literature of Music. 1896. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=fTQ6AAAAMAAJ&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false]. Reviews: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=bjdVAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA56#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=dzcZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA22#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=R0gcAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA470#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qK5OAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA55#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1chZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA155#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ezszAQAAMAAJ] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=5h61TMyTmOMC] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8k8wAQAAIAAJ] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=i8W8LKTuc0AC]. Author: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=awIQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA275#v=onepage&q&f=false].
*Hoek. Analyses of Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Music, 1940-2000. 2007. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=CRG4AQAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*RILM Abstracts of Music Literature. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HxjjAAAAMAAJ]
*Elliker. The Periodical Literature of Music: Trends from 1952 to 1987. 1996. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=T5ifAAAAMAAJ]
*Forkel. Allgemeine Litteratur der Musik. 1792. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=VTRDAAAAcAAJ&pg=PR1#v=onepage&q&f=false] Review: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3N8sAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA33#v=onepage&q&f=false]
History and bibliography
*Matthew. A Handbook of Musical History and Bibliography. 1898. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=V1g5AAAAIAAJ&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false] Review: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P1lDAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA229#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Boyden. The History and Literature of Music: 1750 to the Present. 1959. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XcAZAQAAIAAJ]
*Brown. An Introduction to the History and Literature of Music in Western Culture. 2nd Ed: 2011. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=aKpGAAAACAAJ]
Chronology, annuals, year books, years
*Eisler. World Chronology of Music History.
*Lowe. A Chronological Cyclopædia of Musicians and Musical Events. 1896.
*Tokyo Ongaku Gakko. Kinsei Hogaku Nempyo. [Chronology of Japanese Music in Recent Ages.] Rokugatsu-Kan. Volume 1. 1912. Volume 2. 1914. Volume 3. 1927. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=drMQAQAAMAAJ]
*Cossar. This Day in Music. 2005. 2010.
*Glassman. The Year in Music. Columbia House.
*[[w:Herman Klein|Hermann Klein]]. Musical Notes. Annual Critical Record of Important Musical Events.
*[[w:Joseph Bennett (critic)|Bennett]]. The Musical Year.
*Hinrichsen's Musical Year Book
*The Musical Year Book of the United States
**The Boston Musical Year Book
*Billboard. Overview. 1982: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT53#v=onepage&q&f=false].
*Billboard. The Year in Music. 1994: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ZAgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA62#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2003: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=bA8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA47#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**The Year in Music and Video. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=uyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT50#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=tiQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA49#v=onepage&q&f=false].
*Jackson. 1965: The Most Revolutionary Year in Music.
*Porter. A Musical Season: 1972-1973.
**Music of Three Seasons: 1974-1977
**Music of Three More Seasons 1977-1980
**Musical Events: A Chronicle, 1980-1983.
*[https://news.1242.com/article/tag/大人のmusic-calendar 【大人のMusic Calendar】]. Nippon Broadcasting System. [Articles from 2016 are included in [https://news.1242.com/article/author/toritani/page/42 NEWS ONLINE 編集部の記事一覧].]
*[http://music-calendar.jp Music Calendar]
History
*"Recorded Sound: The First Century: 1877-1977". Billboard. 21 May 1977. pp
[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XCMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT39#v=onepage&q&f=false RS-1] to RS-117.
Encyclopedias
See also [[w:List of encyclopedias by branch of knowledge/Music]] and [[w:Bibliography of encyclopedias#Music and dance]]
*Encyclopedia of Music in the 20th Century [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=m8W2AgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Moore. Complete Encyclopædia of Music. 1852. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-QBFAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Dictionaries
*Apel. "Dictionaries of music". Harvard Dictionary of Music. 1969. pp [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TMdf1SioFk4C&pg=PA232#v=onepage&q&f=false 232] to 234.
United Kingdom:
*Billboard. Spotlight on the United Kingdom. 1978: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TSQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT78#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1979: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MCUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT100#v=onepage&q&f=false].
Australia:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Australia/New Zealand. 1982: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GCQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT54#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=hiQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT29#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=UCQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA60#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**Live Talent of Australia: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT94#v=onepage&q&f=false]
New Zealand:
*Harvey. A Bibliography of Writings about New Zealand Music Published to the End of 1983. 1985. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=B1ROA_sP-xsC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*The Complete New Zealand Music Charts, 1966-2006: Singles, Albums, DVDs, Compilations. 2007. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wyU5AQAAIAAJ]
*Billboard. New Zealand. 2002: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Rg0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA37#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Canada:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Canada. 1981: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=DSQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT50#v=onepage&q&f=false].
Scandanavia:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Scandanavia. 1981: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GCUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT86#v=onepage&q&f=false].
France:
*Billboard. Spotlight on France. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-wgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1972: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=REUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1982: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT66#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ICUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA41#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Germany:
*Billboard. Spotlight on West Germany. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=zQgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA45#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-iMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT12#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**Spotlight on West Germany, Austria and Switzerland. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=CSUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=RA1-PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Italy:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Italy. 1981: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8iQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT3#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3yQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT36#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2SQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA38-IA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1994: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XQgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA67#v=onepage&q&f=false].
Spain:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Spain. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=5Q8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA49#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Philipines:
*[https://billboardphilippines.com/culture/scenes/lost-history-how-filipino-music-was-documented-in-the-40s-to-2010s/ Lost History: How Filipino Music Was Documented In The ’40s To 2010s]. Billboard Philippines. 18 January 2024.
*[[w:en:Billboard Philippines|Billboard Philippines]]
Brazil:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Brazil. 1996: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=NA0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA51#v=onepage&q&f=false].
United States
*Krummel. Bibliographical Handbook of American Music. 1987. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=G4wcnkvFZl4C&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Krummel. Resources of American Music History: A Directory of Source Materials from Colonial Times to World War II. 1981. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=bJcYAAAAIAAJ]
Soviet
*Aschmann. Current Soviet Music Bibliography. 1976. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2i7jAAAAMAAJ]
Decline of pop music:
*[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/science-proves-pop-music-has-actually-gotten-worse-8173368/ Science Proves: Pop Music Has Actually Gotten Worse]. [[w:Smithsonian (magazine)|Smithsonian]]. 27 July 2012.
*[https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/new-study-discovers-pop-music-has-suffered-significant-decline-in-one-area/ New study discovers pop music has suffered “significant decline” in one area]. [[w:Far Out (website)|Far Out]]. 5 July 2024.
*[https://www.globalnews.ca/news/9001083/why-older-music-more-popular-than-new-music/amp/ There is something very, very wrong with today’s music. It just may not be very good.] [[w:Global News|Global News]]. 24 July 2022.
*[https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/articles/fb84bf19-29c9-4ed3-b6b6-953e8a083334 Has pop music lost its fun?]. BBC. 12 January 2018.
*[https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/its-official-modern-music-is-bad/ It’s official: modern music is bad]. The Spectator. 13 February 2024.
Homogeneity of pop music:
*[https://www.theguardian.com/music/2012/jul/27/pop-music-sounds-same-survey-reveals Pop music these days: it all sounds the same, survey reveals]. The Guardian. 27 July 2012.
*[https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna48356108 Pop Music All Sounds the Same Nowadays]. NBC News. 27 July 2012.
*[https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/why-does-today-s-pop-music-sound-the-same-because-the-same-people-make-it-8368714.html Why does today's pop music sound the same? Because the same people make it]. The Independent. 29 November 2012.
*[https://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyle/science/pop-music-too-loud-and-all-sounds-the-same-official-idUSBRE86P0R9/ Pop music too loud and all sounds the same: official]. Reuters. 26 July 2012.
*[https://theconversation.com/from-art-form-to-asset-our-study-found-popular-songs-are-becoming-more-generic-266097 From art form to asset: our study found popular songs are becoming more generic]. The Conversation. 3 October 2025.
Conferences:
*International Music Industry Conference. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=tggEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA29#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Laserdisc/Karaoke/CES
*Billboard. Karaoke. 1992:
[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=jg8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA41-IA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
**CES and Karaoke. 1994. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=UggEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA77#v=onepage&q&f=false]
**Laserdisc. 1995. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=7AsEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA67#v=onepage&q&f=false]
**Laserdisc/Karaoke. 1996: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iQ8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA59#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Classical music
*Billboard spotlights: 1995 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1g0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA39#v=onepage&q&f=false] (9 September 1995)
**"Classical Music Recording Market". Billboard. 12 April 1980. pp C-1 to C-12 and p 32. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Classical Music: Discovering New Dimensions". Billboard. 10 September 1983. pp C-1 to C-18. (A Billboard Spotlight).
*"Classical" section, and "Best Selling Classical LPs" chart, in Billboard
Jazz
*[[w:en:All About Jazz|All About Jazz]]
Oldies
*"Oldies stations find their place in radio market". Star-News. 13 March 1988. pp 1D & [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2OoyAAAAIBAJ&pg=PA16#v=onepage&q&f=false 6D]: "Oldies".
*Billboard. 15 April 1972. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=a0UEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT7#v=onepage&q&f=false p 47].
*Billboard. 17 April 1961, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JiIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false p 1].
*Billboard. 4 January 1960, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Ch8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false p 1]
Nostalgia
See also [[Universal Bibliography/Nostalgia]]
*"A Perspective on the Future of Nostalgia". Billboard. 4 May 1974. pp [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=cgkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA37#v=onepage&q&f=false N-1] to N-54 and two more pages.
*Carr. Nostalgia, Song and the Quest for Home: Production, Text, Reception. 2025. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=xz1jEQAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Charts
*Carroll, " Did Billboard, Cash Box, and Record World Charts Tell the Same Story? Perception and Reality, 1960-1979"(2022) 9 Rock Music Studies [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19401159.2022.2054107 199]
Magazines
See also [[w:Category:Music magazines]]
*Billboard. Google: [https://books.google.co.uk/books/serial/ISSN:00062510?rview=1&lr=&sa=N&start=2770 1942] onwards
==Japanese and Japan==
*The Ashgate Research Companion to Japanese Music. 2017. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=W2JTgQGc99EC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=4tINDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA2#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Billboard. Spotlight on Japan. 1970: 19 December 1970 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mSkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA37#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1971: 11 December 1971 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Fg8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA39#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1973: 17 February 1973 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=QEUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT25#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1977: 30 April 1977 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=USMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT46#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1979: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_iQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT48#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1982:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=byQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT38#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1CQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT65#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-CMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=RA1-PA79#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1993: 12 June 1993 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=9A8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA57#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1995: 5 August 1995 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=xwsEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA52-IA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1996: 31 August 1996 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=vwcEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA66#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1997: 30 August 1997 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_gkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA61#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1998: 26 September 1998 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GgoEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA117#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2000: 9 September 2000 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=aREEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA65#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2002: 7 September 2002 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-QwEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA53#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2003: 5 July 2003 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3w0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA45#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**"Japan in 1974: Business Bristles While Shortages Are Met". Billboard. 23 February 1974. pp J-1 to J-30. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Made in Japan: A Dynamic Music Industry". Billboard. 1 March 1975. pp J-1 to J-23. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Japan '76". Billboard. 17 April 1976. pp 36 to 59. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Japanese Music: The Challenge of Recession". Billboard. 27 May 1978. pp J-1 to J-31. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Music in Japan: Industry Views 1981 With Quiet Optimism". Billboard. 30 May 1981. pp J-1 to J-18.
**"Japan: Where Technology Greets Tradition". (An International Market Profile). Billboard. 21 May 1983. pp J-1 to J-13. Follows p 34.
**"Billboard Spotlight on Japan: VCRs and CDs Will Be Pacemakers". Billboard. 26 May 1984. pp J-1 to J-11. Follows p 38.
**"Spotlight on Japan". Billboard. 6 June 1987. pp J-1 to J-12.
**"Japan '88". Billboard. 9 July 1988. pp J-1 to J-11. (A Billboard International Spotlight).
**"Japan". ("Japan '89"/"Spotlight on Japan"). Billboard. 3 June 1989. pp J-1 to J-20. (International Spotlight).
**"Japan". ("International Spotlight"/"A Billboard Spotlight"). Billboard. 25 May 1991. pp J-1 to J-26. Follows p 50. Called "Japan '91" on front page.
*[[w:The Best Ten|The Best Ten]] (ザ・ベストテン). [Television programme]. [https://www.tbs.co.jp/tbs-ch/special/the_bestten/ Episodes].
*[[w:ja:Music Station|Music Station]]. [Television programme]. Episodes: [https://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/music/contents/m_lineup/0003/index.html episode 1] etc.
*Wade. Music in Japan: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture. 2005. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XXYIAQAAMAAJ]
*Malm. Japanese Music & Musical Instruments. 1959. [https://books.google.com/books?id=QkTaAAAAMAAJ]
*[[w:Francis Taylor Piggott|Pigott]]. The Music and Musical Instruments of Japan. 1893 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ttKTUwmjzMwC&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1909. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MAM5AAAAIAAJ]
Bibliography
*Tsuge. Japanese Music: An Annotated Bibliography. 1986. [https://books.google.com/books?id=YCsKAQAAMAAJ]
*[[w:ja:三井徹|Tōru Mitsui]]. Popyurā Ongaku Kankei Tosho Mokuroku: Ryūkōka, Jazu, Rokku, J-poppu no Hyakunen. (Japanese: ポピュラー音楽関係図書目録: 流行歌、ジャズ、ロック、Jポップの百年). Nichigai Associates. 2009. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=dSAxAQAAIAAJ]. Catalogues: [https://search.worldcat.org/title/406243182] [https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1970586434933272116]
*[https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/rnavi/avmaterials/post_572 音楽に関する文献を探すには(主題書誌)]. NDL.
Dictionaries
*[[w:ja:下中弥三郎|Shimonaka Yasaburo]] (ed). Ongaku Jiten. Heibonsha. Review: (1959) 18 Journal of Asian Studies 295 [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-asian-studies/article/abs/ongaku-jiten-dictionary-of-music-ed-shimonaka-yasaburo-tokyo-heibonsha-195557-12-volumes-900-yen-per-volume/F3067B1CE61B5B2C647091E69CE8C8DD] [https://read.dukeupress.edu/journal-of-asian-studies/article-abstract/18/2/295/322980/Ongaku-jiten-Dictionary-of-Music?redirectedFrom=fulltext]
History
*Eta Harich-Schneider. A History of Japanese Music. 1973. [https://books.google.com/books?id=3AraAAAAMAAJ]
*Koh-ichi Hattori. 123 Years of Japanese Music: The Culture of Japan Through a Look at Its Music. 2004. [https://books.google.com/books?id=znzsAAAAMAAJ]
**Koh-ichi Hattori. 36,000 Days of Japanese Music: The Culture of Japan Through A Look At Its Music. Pacific Vision. Pierce, Southfield, Michigan. 1996. ISBN 0965364208.
*Shinpan Nihon Ryūkōkashi. (Japanese: 新版日本流行歌史). [[w:ja:社会思想社|Shakaishisosha]]. 1994. Review: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XQdIAAAAMAAJ]. Catalogue: [https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/en/books/R100000002-I000002420287]
**新版日本流行歌史: 1960-1994. [https://books.google.com/books?id=_b4pAQAAIAAJ] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=nb4pAQAAIAAJ].
**新版日本流行歌史: 1938-1959
**1867-1937
*Mehl. Music and the Making of Modern Japan: Joining the Global Concert. 2024. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P3QMEQAAQBAJ&pg=PA2#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Modern, contemporary, today
*Johnson. Handbook of Japanese Music in the Modern Era. 2024. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=KNP7EAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Matsue. Focus: Music in Contemporary Japan. 2016. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AQgtCgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Music of Japan Today. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YZQYEAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Popular music
*Mitsui (ed). Made in Japan: Studies in Popular Music. 2014. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YWQKBAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Stevens. Japanese Popular Music: Culture, Authenticity and Power. 2008. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=OHMkdcL9DAMC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Mitsui. Popular Music in Japan: Transformation Inspired by the West. 2020. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=FpbqDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Nagahara. Tokyo Boogie-Woogie: Japan’s Pop Era and Its Discontents. 2017. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iTxYDgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Patterson. Music and Words: Producing Popular Songs in Modern Japan, 1887–1952. 2019. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P0FvDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*James Stanlaw. "Using English identity markers in Japanese Popular Music". English in East and South Asia. Chapter 14. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=88A1EAAAQBAJ&pg=PT109#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*"Japanese Popular Music in Singapore". Asian Music. vol 34. No 1: Fall/Winter 2002/2003. p 1. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_D4JAQAAMAAJ]
*Steve McClure. Nipponpop. Tuttle Publishing. 1998. ISBN 9780804821070. ISBN 0804821070. [Sometimes called "Nippon Pop"]. Catalogue: [https://search.worldcat.org/title/Nipponpop/oclc/247384040]
Review: (1998) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=f9egmeZ8YywC 245] The Publishers Weekly 2
From folk to J-pop
*[[w:ja:富澤一誠|Issei Tomizawa]]. Ano subarashii kyoku o mō ichido: fōku kara J-poppu made. (Japanese: あの素晴しい曲をもう一度: フォークからJポップまで). [[w:Shinchosha|Shinchosha]]. 2010. [https://books.google.com/books?id=ju9MAQAAIAAJ]. Catalogue: [https://search.worldcat.org/title/501749494]. Commentary on book: [https://www.ytv.co.jp/michiura/time/2010/01/j2010110.html]. Review of the CD: [https://www.cdjournal.com/i/disc/great-agefree-music-forever-and-great-music-are-o/4109110788].
J-pop
*Bourdaghs. Sayonara Amerika, Sayonara Nippon: A Geopolitical Prehistory of J-pop. 2012. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=K_y88JwibrMC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*"The Rise of J-Pop in Asia and Its Impact" (2004) Japan Spotlight. vol 23. p 24. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=i7C0AAAAIAAJ]
*Terence Lancashire. "J-pop's elusive J: Is Japanese popular music Japanese?" (2008) Perfect Beat. vol 9. No 1. p 38. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=5No4AQAAIAAJ]
*Tetsu Misaki. J-poppu no Nihongo: kashiron. (Japanese: Jポップの日本語: 歌詞論). [[w:ja:彩流社|彩流社 (Sairyusha)]]. 2002. [https://books.google.com/books?id=dsMpAQAAIAAJ] [https://search.worldcat.org/ja/title/J-:/oclc/52005194]
*[[w:ja:烏賀陽弘道|Hiromichi Ugaya]]. Jpoppu Towa Nanika: Kyodaikasuru Ongaku Sangyō. (Japanese: Jポップとは何か: 巨大化する音楽産業). 2005. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TLlOAAAAMAAJ] catalogue [https://search.worldcat.org/ja/title/J-:/oclc/676652594] [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BA71618018]
Japanese rock
*Takarajima Special Edition: Encyclopedia of Japanese Rock 1955-1990. Nihon rokku daihyakka: Rokabirī kara bando būmu made. (Japanese: 日本ロック大百科 [年表編] ロカビリーからバンド・ブームまで 1955〜1990). [[w:ja:JICC出版局|JICC Shuppankyoku]]. 1992. ISBN 9784796602907. ISBN 4796602909. Catalogues: [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BN07889172] [https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/catalog/2263400].
*Japanese Rock: Standard: 1967-1985. 日本のロック名曲徹底ガイド: 名曲263決定盤846. CDJournal. 2008. ISBN 9784861710469. ISBN 4861710464. [https://www.cdjournal.com/Company/products/mook.php?mno=20081002]. Catalogue: [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BA8932668X?l=en].
*Kojima Satoshi (Japanese: 小島智). 検証・80年代日本のロック. アルファベータブックス. 2024. ISBN 9784865981179. ISBN 4865981179. [https://books.google.com/books?id=0gbl0AEACAAJ]. Review: [https://mainichi.jp/articles/20241026/ddm/015/070/005000c].
Jazz
*[[w:ja:スイングジャーナル|Swing Journal]] (1947 to 2010) Commentary: [https://www.allaboutjazz.com/news/swing-journal-long-standing-jazz-magazine-to-be-suspended-in-june/]
Japanese fusion:
*THE DIG presents 日本のフュージョン. Shinko Music Mook. Released 19 April 2013. Commentary: [https://www.cdjournal.com/news/casiopea/50967]. No II. Released 23 October 2014. Commentary: [https://www.cdjournal.com/news/takanaka-masayoshi/62225]
Classical
*[[w:ja:ぶらあぼ|Bravo]] (Japanese: ぶらあぼ) ebravo.jp
*[[w:ja:音楽芸術 (雑誌)|Ongaku Geijutsu]] (Japanese: 音楽芸術)
Magazines
For Japanese music magazines, see [[w:ja:日本の音楽雑誌]].
*Music Periodicals in Japan — A Comprehensive List (1988) 35 Fontes Artis Musicae 116 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23507222] [https://books.google.com/books?id=qHYWAAAAIAAJ]
**Kishimoto, "Additional Corrections and Alphabetical Title Index" (1989) 36 Fontes Artis Musicae 38 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23507313] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=7XYWAAAAIAAJ]
*Special Bibliography: A Bibliography of Japanese Magazines and Music (1959) 3 Ethnomusicology 76 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/924290]
*A Historical Survey of Music Periodicals in Japan: 1881—1920 (1989) 36 Fontes Artis Musicae 44 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23507314]
*[[w:ja:篠原章|Akira Shinohara]]. 日本ロック雑誌クロニクル. [[w:en:Ohta Publishing|Ohta Publishing]]. 2005. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=L8opAQAAIAAJ]
*[[w:Oricon|Oricon]] (オリコン)
**[https://web.archive.org/web/19970412131857/http://www.999.com/Oricon/index.html Oricon Music Site]. Commentary: [https://internet.watch.impress.co.jp/www/article/980309/oms.htm].
*[[w:Billboard Japan|Billboard Japan]] (ビルボード・ジャパン)
**Music Labo (ミュージック・ラボ) (1970 to 1994)
*Music Research (ミュージック・リサーチ) ["Weekly Music Magazine"]. Catalogue: [https://web.archive.org/web/20260319070908/https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/books/R100000002-I000000039804].
*Rolling Stone Japan
*新譜ジャーナル (Shinpu Journal). Catalogue: [https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/books/R100000002-I000000012315]. Began 1968 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=L8opAQAAIAAJ], later called シンプジャーナル
**シンプジャーナル
*Myūjikku mansurī [ミュージック・マンスリー] [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/AN00396190]
*カセットライフ. (Cassette Life). [[w:ja:シンコーミュージック・エンタテイメント|Shinko Music Entertainment]]
*[[w:ja:CDジャーナル|CDJournal]]
*[[w:ja:Rockin'on Japan|Rockin'on Japan]]. (ロッキング・オン・ジャパン). (1986 onwards)
*[[w:ja:Rooftop|Rooftop]] (1976 onwards)
Columns in periodicals
*"Japanese Newsnotes". Billboard. (eg 17 April 1961, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JiIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA13#v=onepage&q&f=false p 13].)
Websites
*[[w:ja:ナタリー (ニュースサイト)|Natalie]] (ナタリー)
*[[w:ja:BARKS|Barks]]
*OKMusic
Charts
For Japanese music charts, see [[w:ja:日本の音楽チャート]]
Chart books
*Oricon Chart Book (Japanese: オリコンチャート・ブック)
**1987 to 1998 Oricon Chart Book. All Albums. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=KvEoNwAACAAJ]
**Album Chart Book Complete Edition 1970〜2005. Catalogue:[https://www.tosyokan.pref.shizuoka.jp/licsxp-opac/WOpacMsgNewListToTifTilDetailAction.do?tilcod=1000610247212]
*澤山博之. ミュージック・ライフ 東京で1番売れていたレコード 1958~1966. Shinko Music Entertainment. 2019. [Charts published in Music Life from 1958 onwards]. Commentary: [https://mikiki.tokyo.jp/articles/-/20952 Mikiki]
Number ones
*Oricon No.1 Hits 500. Clubhouse (Japanese: クラブハウス). 1994. 1998.
**[https://books.google.com/books?id=GlsnNwAACAAJ vol 1 (1968~1985)]. ISBN 9784906496129.
**[https://books.google.com/books?id=icInNwAACAAJ vol 2 (1986~1994)]. ISBN 9784906496136.
Awards
Japan Record Awards
*輝く!日本レコード大賞 公式データブック: 放送60回記念: TBS公認. Shinko Music Entertainment. ISBN 9784401647019. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JcDqvwEACAAJ] [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BB2773137X]
Traditional, Hogaku
*Malm. Traditional Japanese Music and Musical Instruments. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Yn3VQbqywCsC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Miyuki Yoshikami. Japan's Musical Tradition: Hogaku from Prehistory to the Present. 2020. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=X3XTDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Hughes. Traditional Folk Song in Modern Japan: Sources, Sentiment and Society. 2008. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=yfV5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PR1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Koto:
*Tokyo Academy of Music. Collection of Japanese Koto Music. 1888. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=RncQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP13#v=onepage&q&f=false][https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044040839565&seq=1]
Exam guides:
For the 音楽CD検定 exam on music CDs:
*音楽CD検定公式ガイドブック. 2007. [[w:ja:音楽出版社 (企業)|Ongaku Shuppansha Co Ltd]] (音楽出版社). [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=sbjdeDJMkQcC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false vol 1]. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AoFgIowII48C&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false vol 2]. Commentary: [https://www.cdjournal.com/i/news/-/15303] [https://www.oricon.co.jp/news/46065/full/] [https://allabout.co.jp/gm/gc/57723/] [https://www.oricon.co.jp/news/45388/full/].
Children's music
*Elizabeth May. The Influence of the Meiji Period on Japanese Children's Music. University of California Press. 1963. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=54cHAQAAMAAJ]
**Japanese Children's Music Before and After Contact with the West. University of California at Los Angeles. 1958. (doctoral dissertation).
DJs
*Masahiro Yasuda, "How Japanese DJs cut across Market Boundaries" (1999) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=H5QJAQAAMAAJ 4] Perfect Beat 45
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{{Bibliography}}
See [[s:Category:Music]] and [[w:Category:Music books]]
This part of the [[Universal Bibliography]] is a bibliography of music.
Bibliography
*[[w:Bibliography of Music Literature|Bibliography of Music Literature]]
*Green (ed). Foundations in Music Bibliography. 1993. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=rADdpZN9UhAC&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Krummel. The Literature of Music Bibliography: An Account of the Writings on the History of Music Printing & Publishing. 2nd Ed: 1992. [https://books.google.com/books?id=3AZsiITI-IEC]
*Bibliography of Music Bibliographies. 1967. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=d6YJAQAAMAAJ]
*Bayne. A Guide to Library Research in Music. 2008. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ExGbDqu9gPAC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*A Selected Bibliography of Music Librarianship [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=X5AeOl4O-osC]
*Bradley. American Music Librarianship: A Research and Information Guide. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=VabcAAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Music Reference and Research Materials. 3rd Ed: 1974: [https://books.google.com/books?id=5Y1IAAAAMAAJ]
*Agruss. Guide to Reference Books on Music. 1948. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wX06AAAAIAAJ]
*Haggerty. A Guide to Popular Music Reference Books: An Annotated Bibliography. 1995. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2OnEEAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Coover. A Bibliography of Music Dictionaries. 1952: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=NH06AAAAIAAJ]. Music Lexicography. 2nd Ed: 1958. Including a Study of Lacunae in Music Lexicography and a Bibliography of Music Dictionaries. 3rd Ed: 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=jKMJAQAAMAAJ].
*A Bibliography of Books on Music and Collections of Music. 1948. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=vfvpnwWWlZwC]
*Deakin. Musical Bibliography: A Catalogue of the Musical Works. 1892. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-UgQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP7#v=onepage&q&f=false] (England 15th to 18th century)
*Matthew. The Literature of Music. 1896. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=fTQ6AAAAMAAJ&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false]. Reviews: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=bjdVAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA56#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=dzcZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA22#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=R0gcAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA470#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qK5OAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA55#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1chZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA155#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ezszAQAAMAAJ] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=5h61TMyTmOMC] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8k8wAQAAIAAJ] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=i8W8LKTuc0AC]. Author: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=awIQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA275#v=onepage&q&f=false].
*Hoek. Analyses of Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Music, 1940-2000. 2007. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=CRG4AQAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*RILM Abstracts of Music Literature. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HxjjAAAAMAAJ]
*Elliker. The Periodical Literature of Music: Trends from 1952 to 1987. 1996. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=T5ifAAAAMAAJ]
*Forkel. Allgemeine Litteratur der Musik. 1792. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=VTRDAAAAcAAJ&pg=PR1#v=onepage&q&f=false] Review: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3N8sAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA33#v=onepage&q&f=false]
History and bibliography
*Matthew. A Handbook of Musical History and Bibliography. 1898. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=V1g5AAAAIAAJ&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false] Review: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P1lDAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA229#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Boyden. The History and Literature of Music: 1750 to the Present. 1959. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XcAZAQAAIAAJ]
*Brown. An Introduction to the History and Literature of Music in Western Culture. 2nd Ed: 2011. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=aKpGAAAACAAJ]
Chronology, annuals, year books, years
*Eisler. World Chronology of Music History.
*Lowe. A Chronological Cyclopædia of Musicians and Musical Events. 1896.
*Tokyo Ongaku Gakko. Kinsei Hogaku Nempyo. [Chronology of Japanese Music in Recent Ages.] Rokugatsu-Kan. Volume 1. 1912. Volume 2. 1914. Volume 3. 1927. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=drMQAQAAMAAJ]
*Cossar. This Day in Music. 2005. 2010.
*Glassman. The Year in Music. Columbia House.
*[[w:Herman Klein|Hermann Klein]]. Musical Notes. Annual Critical Record of Important Musical Events.
*[[w:Joseph Bennett (critic)|Bennett]]. The Musical Year.
*Hinrichsen's Musical Year Book
*The Musical Year Book of the United States
**The Boston Musical Year Book
*Billboard. Overview. 1982: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT53#v=onepage&q&f=false].
*Billboard. The Year in Music. 1994: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ZAgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA62#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2003: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=bA8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA47#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**The Year in Music and Video. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=uyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT50#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=tiQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA49#v=onepage&q&f=false].
*Jackson. 1965: The Most Revolutionary Year in Music.
*Porter. A Musical Season: 1972-1973.
**Music of Three Seasons: 1974-1977
**Music of Three More Seasons 1977-1980
**Musical Events: A Chronicle, 1980-1983.
*[https://news.1242.com/article/tag/大人のmusic-calendar 【大人のMusic Calendar】]. Nippon Broadcasting System. [Articles from 2016 are included in [https://news.1242.com/article/author/toritani/page/42 NEWS ONLINE 編集部の記事一覧].]
*[http://music-calendar.jp Music Calendar]
History
*"Recorded Sound: The First Century: 1877-1977". Billboard. 21 May 1977. pp [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XCMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT39#v=onepage&q&f=false RS-1] to RS-117.
Encyclopedias
See also [[w:List of encyclopedias by branch of knowledge/Music]] and [[w:Bibliography of encyclopedias#Music and dance]]
*Encyclopedia of Music in the 20th Century [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=m8W2AgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Moore. Complete Encyclopædia of Music. 1852. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-QBFAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Dictionaries
*Apel. "Dictionaries of music". Harvard Dictionary of Music. 1969. pp [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TMdf1SioFk4C&pg=PA232#v=onepage&q&f=false 232] to 234.
United Kingdom:
*Billboard. Spotlight on the United Kingdom. 1978: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TSQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT78#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1979: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MCUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT100#v=onepage&q&f=false].
Australia:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Australia/New Zealand. 1982: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GCQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT54#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=hiQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT29#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=UCQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA60#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**Live Talent of Australia: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT94#v=onepage&q&f=false]
New Zealand:
*Harvey. A Bibliography of Writings about New Zealand Music Published to the End of 1983. 1985. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=B1ROA_sP-xsC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*The Complete New Zealand Music Charts, 1966-2006: Singles, Albums, DVDs, Compilations. 2007. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wyU5AQAAIAAJ]
*Billboard. New Zealand. 2002: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Rg0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA37#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Canada:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Canada. 1981: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=DSQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT50#v=onepage&q&f=false].
Scandanavia:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Scandanavia. 1981: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GCUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT86#v=onepage&q&f=false].
France:
*Billboard. Spotlight on France. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-wgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1972: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=REUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1982: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AyQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT66#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ICUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA41#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Germany:
*Billboard. Spotlight on West Germany. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=zQgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA45#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-iMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT12#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**Spotlight on West Germany, Austria and Switzerland. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=CSUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=RA1-PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Italy:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Italy. 1981: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8iQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT3#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3yQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT36#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2SQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA38-IA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1994: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XQgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA67#v=onepage&q&f=false].
Spain:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Spain. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=5Q8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA49#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Philipines:
*[https://billboardphilippines.com/culture/scenes/lost-history-how-filipino-music-was-documented-in-the-40s-to-2010s/ Lost History: How Filipino Music Was Documented In The ’40s To 2010s]. Billboard Philippines. 18 January 2024.
*[[w:en:Billboard Philippines|Billboard Philippines]]
Brazil:
*Billboard. Spotlight on Brazil. 1996: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=NA0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA51#v=onepage&q&f=false].
United States
*Krummel. Bibliographical Handbook of American Music. 1987. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=G4wcnkvFZl4C&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Krummel. Resources of American Music History: A Directory of Source Materials from Colonial Times to World War II. 1981. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=bJcYAAAAIAAJ]
Soviet
*Aschmann. Current Soviet Music Bibliography. 1976. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2i7jAAAAMAAJ]
Decline of pop music:
*[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/science-proves-pop-music-has-actually-gotten-worse-8173368/ Science Proves: Pop Music Has Actually Gotten Worse]. [[w:Smithsonian (magazine)|Smithsonian]]. 27 July 2012.
*[https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/new-study-discovers-pop-music-has-suffered-significant-decline-in-one-area/ New study discovers pop music has suffered “significant decline” in one area]. [[w:Far Out (website)|Far Out]]. 5 July 2024.
*[https://www.globalnews.ca/news/9001083/why-older-music-more-popular-than-new-music/amp/ There is something very, very wrong with today’s music. It just may not be very good.] [[w:Global News|Global News]]. 24 July 2022.
*[https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/articles/fb84bf19-29c9-4ed3-b6b6-953e8a083334 Has pop music lost its fun?]. BBC. 12 January 2018.
*[https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/its-official-modern-music-is-bad/ It’s official: modern music is bad]. The Spectator. 13 February 2024.
Homogeneity of pop music:
*[https://www.theguardian.com/music/2012/jul/27/pop-music-sounds-same-survey-reveals Pop music these days: it all sounds the same, survey reveals]. The Guardian. 27 July 2012.
*[https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna48356108 Pop Music All Sounds the Same Nowadays]. NBC News. 27 July 2012.
*[https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/why-does-today-s-pop-music-sound-the-same-because-the-same-people-make-it-8368714.html Why does today's pop music sound the same? Because the same people make it]. The Independent. 29 November 2012.
*[https://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyle/science/pop-music-too-loud-and-all-sounds-the-same-official-idUSBRE86P0R9/ Pop music too loud and all sounds the same: official]. Reuters. 26 July 2012.
*[https://theconversation.com/from-art-form-to-asset-our-study-found-popular-songs-are-becoming-more-generic-266097 From art form to asset: our study found popular songs are becoming more generic]. The Conversation. 3 October 2025.
Conferences:
*International Music Industry Conference. 1971: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=tggEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA29#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Laserdisc/Karaoke/CES
*Billboard. Karaoke. 1992:
[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=jg8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA41-IA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
**CES and Karaoke. 1994. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=UggEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA77#v=onepage&q&f=false]
**Laserdisc. 1995. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=7AsEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA67#v=onepage&q&f=false]
**Laserdisc/Karaoke. 1996: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iQ8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA59#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Classical music
*Billboard spotlights: 1995 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1g0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA39#v=onepage&q&f=false] (9 September 1995)
**"Classical Music Recording Market". Billboard. 12 April 1980. pp C-1 to C-12 and p 32. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Classical Music: Discovering New Dimensions". Billboard. 10 September 1983. pp C-1 to C-18. (A Billboard Spotlight).
*"Classical" section, and "Best Selling Classical LPs" chart, in Billboard
Jazz
*[[w:en:All About Jazz|All About Jazz]]
Oldies
*"Oldies stations find their place in radio market". Star-News. 13 March 1988. pp 1D & [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2OoyAAAAIBAJ&pg=PA16#v=onepage&q&f=false 6D]: "Oldies".
*Billboard. 15 April 1972. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=a0UEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT7#v=onepage&q&f=false p 47].
*Billboard. 17 April 1961, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JiIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false p 1].
*Billboard. 4 January 1960, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Ch8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false p 1]
Nostalgia
See also [[Universal Bibliography/Nostalgia]]
*"A Perspective on the Future of Nostalgia". Billboard. 4 May 1974. pp [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=cgkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA37#v=onepage&q&f=false N-1] to N-54 and two more pages.
*Carr. Nostalgia, Song and the Quest for Home: Production, Text, Reception. 2025. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=xz1jEQAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Charts
*Carroll, " Did Billboard, Cash Box, and Record World Charts Tell the Same Story? Perception and Reality, 1960-1979"(2022) 9 Rock Music Studies [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19401159.2022.2054107 199]
Magazines
See also [[w:Category:Music magazines]]
*Billboard. Google: [https://books.google.co.uk/books/serial/ISSN:00062510?rview=1&lr=&sa=N&start=2770 1942] onwards
==Japanese and Japan==
*The Ashgate Research Companion to Japanese Music. 2017. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=W2JTgQGc99EC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=4tINDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA2#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Billboard. Spotlight on Japan. 1970: 19 December 1970 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mSkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA37#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1971: 11 December 1971 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Fg8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA39#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1973: 17 February 1973 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=QEUEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT25#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1977: 30 April 1977 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=USMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT46#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1979: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_iQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT48#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1982:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=byQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT38#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1985: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1CQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PT65#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1986:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-CMEAAAAMBAJ&pg=RA1-PA79#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1993: 12 June 1993 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=9A8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA57#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1995: 5 August 1995 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=xwsEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA52-IA1#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1996: 31 August 1996 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=vwcEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA66#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1997: 30 August 1997 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_gkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA61#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1998: 26 September 1998 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GgoEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA117#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2000: 9 September 2000 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=aREEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA65#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2002: 7 September 2002 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-QwEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA53#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 2003: 5 July 2003 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3w0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA45#v=onepage&q&f=false].
**"Japan in 1974: Business Bristles While Shortages Are Met". Billboard. 23 February 1974. pp J-1 to J-30. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Made in Japan: A Dynamic Music Industry". Billboard. 1 March 1975. pp J-1 to J-23. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Japan '76". Billboard. 17 April 1976. pp 36 to 59. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Japanese Music: The Challenge of Recession". Billboard. 27 May 1978. pp J-1 to J-31. (A Billboard Spotlight).
**"Music in Japan: Industry Views 1981 With Quiet Optimism". Billboard. 30 May 1981. pp J-1 to J-18.
**"Japan: Where Technology Greets Tradition". (An International Market Profile). Billboard. 21 May 1983. pp J-1 to J-13. Follows p 34.
**"Billboard Spotlight on Japan: VCRs and CDs Will Be Pacemakers". Billboard. 26 May 1984. pp J-1 to J-11. Follows p 38.
**"Spotlight on Japan". Billboard. 6 June 1987. pp J-1 to J-12.
**"Japan '88". Billboard. 9 July 1988. pp J-1 to J-11. (A Billboard International Spotlight).
**"Japan". ("Japan '89"/"Spotlight on Japan"). Billboard. 3 June 1989. pp J-1 to J-20. (International Spotlight).
**"Japan". ("International Spotlight"/"A Billboard Spotlight"). Billboard. 25 May 1991. pp J-1 to J-26. Follows p 50. Called "Japan '91" on front page.
*[[w:The Best Ten|The Best Ten]] (ザ・ベストテン). [Television programme]. [https://www.tbs.co.jp/tbs-ch/special/the_bestten/ Episodes].
*[[w:ja:Music Station|Music Station]]. [Television programme]. Episodes: [https://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/music/contents/m_lineup/0003/index.html episode 1] etc.
*Wade. Music in Japan: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture. 2005. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XXYIAQAAMAAJ]
*Malm. Japanese Music & Musical Instruments. 1959. [https://books.google.com/books?id=QkTaAAAAMAAJ]
*[[w:Francis Taylor Piggott|Pigott]]. The Music and Musical Instruments of Japan. 1893 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ttKTUwmjzMwC&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false]. 1909. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MAM5AAAAIAAJ]
Bibliography
*Tsuge. Japanese Music: An Annotated Bibliography. 1986. [https://books.google.com/books?id=YCsKAQAAMAAJ]
*[[w:ja:三井徹|Tōru Mitsui]]. Popyurā Ongaku Kankei Tosho Mokuroku: Ryūkōka, Jazu, Rokku, J-poppu no Hyakunen. (Japanese: ポピュラー音楽関係図書目録: 流行歌、ジャズ、ロック、Jポップの百年). Nichigai Associates. 2009. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=dSAxAQAAIAAJ]. Catalogues: [https://search.worldcat.org/title/406243182] [https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1970586434933272116]
*[https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/rnavi/avmaterials/post_572 音楽に関する文献を探すには(主題書誌)]. NDL.
Dictionaries
*[[w:ja:下中弥三郎|Shimonaka Yasaburo]] (ed). Ongaku Jiten. Heibonsha. Review: (1959) 18 Journal of Asian Studies 295 [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-asian-studies/article/abs/ongaku-jiten-dictionary-of-music-ed-shimonaka-yasaburo-tokyo-heibonsha-195557-12-volumes-900-yen-per-volume/F3067B1CE61B5B2C647091E69CE8C8DD] [https://read.dukeupress.edu/journal-of-asian-studies/article-abstract/18/2/295/322980/Ongaku-jiten-Dictionary-of-Music?redirectedFrom=fulltext]
History
*Eta Harich-Schneider. A History of Japanese Music. 1973. [https://books.google.com/books?id=3AraAAAAMAAJ]
*Koh-ichi Hattori. 123 Years of Japanese Music: The Culture of Japan Through a Look at Its Music. 2004. [https://books.google.com/books?id=znzsAAAAMAAJ]
**Koh-ichi Hattori. 36,000 Days of Japanese Music: The Culture of Japan Through A Look At Its Music. Pacific Vision. Pierce, Southfield, Michigan. 1996. ISBN 0965364208.
*Shinpan Nihon Ryūkōkashi. (Japanese: 新版日本流行歌史). [[w:ja:社会思想社|Shakaishisosha]]. 1994. Review: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XQdIAAAAMAAJ]. Catalogue: [https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/en/books/R100000002-I000002420287]
**新版日本流行歌史: 1960-1994. [https://books.google.com/books?id=_b4pAQAAIAAJ] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=nb4pAQAAIAAJ].
**新版日本流行歌史: 1938-1959
**1867-1937
*Mehl. Music and the Making of Modern Japan: Joining the Global Concert. 2024. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P3QMEQAAQBAJ&pg=PA2#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Modern, contemporary, today
*Johnson. Handbook of Japanese Music in the Modern Era. 2024. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=KNP7EAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Matsue. Focus: Music in Contemporary Japan. 2016. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AQgtCgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Music of Japan Today. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YZQYEAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Popular music
*Mitsui (ed). Made in Japan: Studies in Popular Music. 2014. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YWQKBAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Stevens. Japanese Popular Music: Culture, Authenticity and Power. 2008. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=OHMkdcL9DAMC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Mitsui. Popular Music in Japan: Transformation Inspired by the West. 2020. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=FpbqDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Nagahara. Tokyo Boogie-Woogie: Japan’s Pop Era and Its Discontents. 2017. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iTxYDgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Patterson. Music and Words: Producing Popular Songs in Modern Japan, 1887–1952. 2019. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P0FvDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*James Stanlaw. "Using English identity markers in Japanese Popular Music". English in East and South Asia. Chapter 14. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=88A1EAAAQBAJ&pg=PT109#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*"Japanese Popular Music in Singapore". Asian Music. vol 34. No 1: Fall/Winter 2002/2003. p 1. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_D4JAQAAMAAJ]
*Steve McClure. Nipponpop. Tuttle Publishing. 1998. ISBN 9780804821070. ISBN 0804821070. [Sometimes called "Nippon Pop"]. Catalogue: [https://search.worldcat.org/title/Nipponpop/oclc/247384040]
Review: (1998) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=f9egmeZ8YywC 245] The Publishers Weekly 2
From folk to J-pop
*[[w:ja:富澤一誠|Issei Tomizawa]]. Ano subarashii kyoku o mō ichido: fōku kara J-poppu made. (Japanese: あの素晴しい曲をもう一度: フォークからJポップまで). [[w:Shinchosha|Shinchosha]]. 2010. [https://books.google.com/books?id=ju9MAQAAIAAJ]. Catalogue: [https://search.worldcat.org/title/501749494]. Commentary on book: [https://www.ytv.co.jp/michiura/time/2010/01/j2010110.html]. Review of the CD: [https://www.cdjournal.com/i/disc/great-agefree-music-forever-and-great-music-are-o/4109110788].
J-pop
*Bourdaghs. Sayonara Amerika, Sayonara Nippon: A Geopolitical Prehistory of J-pop. 2012. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=K_y88JwibrMC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*"The Rise of J-Pop in Asia and Its Impact" (2004) Japan Spotlight. vol 23. p 24. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=i7C0AAAAIAAJ]
*Terence Lancashire. "J-pop's elusive J: Is Japanese popular music Japanese?" (2008) Perfect Beat. vol 9. No 1. p 38. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=5No4AQAAIAAJ]
*Tetsu Misaki. J-poppu no Nihongo: kashiron. (Japanese: Jポップの日本語: 歌詞論). [[w:ja:彩流社|彩流社 (Sairyusha)]]. 2002. [https://books.google.com/books?id=dsMpAQAAIAAJ] [https://search.worldcat.org/ja/title/J-:/oclc/52005194]
*[[w:ja:烏賀陽弘道|Hiromichi Ugaya]]. Jpoppu Towa Nanika: Kyodaikasuru Ongaku Sangyō. (Japanese: Jポップとは何か: 巨大化する音楽産業). 2005. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TLlOAAAAMAAJ] catalogue [https://search.worldcat.org/ja/title/J-:/oclc/676652594] [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BA71618018]
Japanese rock
*Takarajima Special Edition: Encyclopedia of Japanese Rock 1955-1990. Nihon rokku daihyakka: Rokabirī kara bando būmu made. (Japanese: 日本ロック大百科 [年表編] ロカビリーからバンド・ブームまで 1955〜1990). [[w:ja:JICC出版局|JICC Shuppankyoku]]. 1992. ISBN 9784796602907. ISBN 4796602909. Catalogues: [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BN07889172] [https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/catalog/2263400].
*Japanese Rock: Standard: 1967-1985. 日本のロック名曲徹底ガイド: 名曲263決定盤846. CDJournal. 2008. ISBN 9784861710469. ISBN 4861710464. [https://www.cdjournal.com/Company/products/mook.php?mno=20081002]. Catalogue: [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BA8932668X?l=en].
*Kojima Satoshi (Japanese: 小島智). 検証・80年代日本のロック. アルファベータブックス. 2024. ISBN 9784865981179. ISBN 4865981179. [https://books.google.com/books?id=0gbl0AEACAAJ]. Review: [https://mainichi.jp/articles/20241026/ddm/015/070/005000c].
Jazz
*[[w:ja:スイングジャーナル|Swing Journal]] (1947 to 2010) Commentary: [https://www.allaboutjazz.com/news/swing-journal-long-standing-jazz-magazine-to-be-suspended-in-june/]
Japanese fusion:
*THE DIG presents 日本のフュージョン. Shinko Music Mook. Released 19 April 2013. Commentary: [https://www.cdjournal.com/news/casiopea/50967]. No II. Released 23 October 2014. Commentary: [https://www.cdjournal.com/news/takanaka-masayoshi/62225]
Classical
*[[w:ja:ぶらあぼ|Bravo]] (Japanese: ぶらあぼ) ebravo.jp
*[[w:ja:音楽芸術 (雑誌)|Ongaku Geijutsu]] (Japanese: 音楽芸術)
Magazines
For Japanese music magazines, see [[w:ja:日本の音楽雑誌]].
*Music Periodicals in Japan — A Comprehensive List (1988) 35 Fontes Artis Musicae 116 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23507222] [https://books.google.com/books?id=qHYWAAAAIAAJ]
**Kishimoto, "Additional Corrections and Alphabetical Title Index" (1989) 36 Fontes Artis Musicae 38 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23507313] [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=7XYWAAAAIAAJ]
*Special Bibliography: A Bibliography of Japanese Magazines and Music (1959) 3 Ethnomusicology 76 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/924290]
*A Historical Survey of Music Periodicals in Japan: 1881—1920 (1989) 36 Fontes Artis Musicae 44 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23507314]
*[[w:ja:篠原章|Akira Shinohara]]. 日本ロック雑誌クロニクル. [[w:en:Ohta Publishing|Ohta Publishing]]. 2005. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=L8opAQAAIAAJ]
*[[w:Oricon|Oricon]] (オリコン)
**[https://web.archive.org/web/19970412131857/http://www.999.com/Oricon/index.html Oricon Music Site]. Commentary: [https://internet.watch.impress.co.jp/www/article/980309/oms.htm].
*[[w:Billboard Japan|Billboard Japan]] (ビルボード・ジャパン)
**Music Labo (ミュージック・ラボ) (1970 to 1994)
*Music Research (ミュージック・リサーチ) ["Weekly Music Magazine"]. Catalogue: [https://web.archive.org/web/20260319070908/https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/books/R100000002-I000000039804].
*Rolling Stone Japan
*新譜ジャーナル (Shinpu Journal). Catalogue: [https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/books/R100000002-I000000012315]. Began 1968 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=L8opAQAAIAAJ], later called シンプジャーナル
**シンプジャーナル
*Myūjikku mansurī [ミュージック・マンスリー] [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/AN00396190]
*カセットライフ. (Cassette Life). [[w:ja:シンコーミュージック・エンタテイメント|Shinko Music Entertainment]]
*[[w:ja:CDジャーナル|CDJournal]]
*[[w:ja:Rockin'on Japan|Rockin'on Japan]]. (ロッキング・オン・ジャパン). (1986 onwards)
*[[w:ja:Rooftop|Rooftop]] (1976 onwards)
Columns in periodicals
*"Japanese Newsnotes". Billboard. (eg 17 April 1961, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JiIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA13#v=onepage&q&f=false p 13].)
Websites
*[[w:ja:ナタリー (ニュースサイト)|Natalie]] (ナタリー)
*[[w:ja:BARKS|Barks]]
*OKMusic
Charts
For Japanese music charts, see [[w:ja:日本の音楽チャート]]
Chart books
*Oricon Chart Book (Japanese: オリコンチャート・ブック)
**1987 to 1998 Oricon Chart Book. All Albums. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=KvEoNwAACAAJ]
**Album Chart Book Complete Edition 1970〜2005. Catalogue:[https://www.tosyokan.pref.shizuoka.jp/licsxp-opac/WOpacMsgNewListToTifTilDetailAction.do?tilcod=1000610247212]
*澤山博之. ミュージック・ライフ 東京で1番売れていたレコード 1958~1966. Shinko Music Entertainment. 2019. [Charts published in Music Life from 1958 onwards]. Commentary: [https://mikiki.tokyo.jp/articles/-/20952 Mikiki]
Number ones
*Oricon No.1 Hits 500. Clubhouse (Japanese: クラブハウス). 1994. 1998.
**[https://books.google.com/books?id=GlsnNwAACAAJ vol 1 (1968~1985)]. ISBN 9784906496129.
**[https://books.google.com/books?id=icInNwAACAAJ vol 2 (1986~1994)]. ISBN 9784906496136.
Awards
Japan Record Awards
*輝く!日本レコード大賞 公式データブック: 放送60回記念: TBS公認. Shinko Music Entertainment. ISBN 9784401647019. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JcDqvwEACAAJ] [https://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BB2773137X]
Traditional, Hogaku
*Malm. Traditional Japanese Music and Musical Instruments. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Yn3VQbqywCsC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Miyuki Yoshikami. Japan's Musical Tradition: Hogaku from Prehistory to the Present. 2020. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=X3XTDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
*Hughes. Traditional Folk Song in Modern Japan: Sources, Sentiment and Society. 2008. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=yfV5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PR1#v=onepage&q&f=false]
Koto:
*Tokyo Academy of Music. Collection of Japanese Koto Music. 1888. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=RncQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP13#v=onepage&q&f=false][https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044040839565&seq=1]
Exam guides:
For the 音楽CD検定 exam on music CDs:
*音楽CD検定公式ガイドブック. 2007. [[w:ja:音楽出版社 (企業)|Ongaku Shuppansha Co Ltd]] (音楽出版社). [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=sbjdeDJMkQcC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false vol 1]. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AoFgIowII48C&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false vol 2]. Commentary: [https://www.cdjournal.com/i/news/-/15303] [https://www.oricon.co.jp/news/46065/full/] [https://allabout.co.jp/gm/gc/57723/] [https://www.oricon.co.jp/news/45388/full/].
Children's music
*Elizabeth May. The Influence of the Meiji Period on Japanese Children's Music. University of California Press. 1963. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=54cHAQAAMAAJ]
**Japanese Children's Music Before and After Contact with the West. University of California at Los Angeles. 1958. (doctoral dissertation).
DJs
*Masahiro Yasuda, "How Japanese DJs cut across Market Boundaries" (1999) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=H5QJAQAAMAAJ 4] Perfect Beat 45
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== English-language pages at betaWV ==
Hi. Beta Wikiversity currently hosts a number of content pages in English, and it shouldn't. A request to import them was [[Wikiversity:Import/Archive 1#Wikiversity:Import/beta|made]] once, years ago. Now as a (temporary) admin of betaWV in the middle of a little cleanup, I'm interested in getting rid of those pages (see [[Wikiversity:Import/beta|list]]). The question is: will enWV have them? If this requires a discussion, perhaps import them first and ''then'' discuss whether you're keeping them? They don't belong on betaWV in any case, so I'd like to avoid putting this off. Thanks. [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 21:34, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:In principle, I'll be happy to do the work. I really hate importing templates that rely on a dozen templates which themselves rely on a dozen modules, etc., but I find it unlikely that beta.wv will have that. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:41, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:: I'd be grateful to you. From my experience, betaWV's templates and modules are usually wholesale copies of enWP's ones, I doubt there's anything unique to them that could break the pages. But of course, those pages are mostly older ones and transclude little to no templates; I think everything'll be fine. [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 21:44, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:I am writing this as I'm wrapping up, but if you look at [[Wikiversity:Import/beta]], I have changed all links from beta.wv to internal so you can see that the red links turned blue via importing. The only ones I didn't import were redundant from Help:<ins>and Wikiversity:</ins> namespace<ins>s</ins> and some pages that you deleted on beta.wv (e.g. "Gold price", whatever that was). If you want me to import more than this page, let me know. Once you sign off, I can delete that subpage. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 22:20, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:: The only course left to import is "Web technologies"; it's on the list. Other than that, the job is done. "Gold price" was a spam page, the other deleted pages had no proper content, too. [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 22:47, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:: @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] apologies, but there's a whole another course - [[:betawikiversity:Category:Ethics and Law in New Media]] - which somehow got marked as Estonian instead of English. This one seems to really be the last one. [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 23:57, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:::Importing. Please ping me if more is needed. Thanks. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:06, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::: @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] a few pages left: [https://beta.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:PrefixIndex/Ethics_and_Law_in_New_Media] [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 00:44, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::::These will all be done in 10 minutes. Thanks/sorry. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 00:54, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::::: Also these pages:
::::::* [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- Laboratory 15 -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]]
::::::* [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- Laboratory 16 -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]]
::::::* [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- Laboratory 17 -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]]
::::::* [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- Laboratory 18 -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]]
:::::: [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 00:55, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::::::{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:16, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::: @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] + [[:betawikiversity:Category:Narrativestory design]] [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 01:27, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::: @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] + [https://beta.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:PrefixIndex?prefix=Philosophy+of+Cognition&namespace=0 Philosophy of Cognition] [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 01:31, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::::{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:52, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::: + [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]] [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 01:50, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::::{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 01:52, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::: +
::::* [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- Laboratory 2 -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]]
::::* [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- Laboratory 3 -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]]
::::* [[:betawikiversity:Web technologies -- Laboratory 5 -- 2009-2010 -- info.uvt.ro]]
:::: [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 01:58, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::::{{done}} —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 02:08, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::: @[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] + [https://beta.wikiversity.org/wiki/Special:PrefixIndex/Social,_Professional_and_Ethical_Aspects_of_IT] [[User:AtUkr|AtUkr]] ([[User talk:AtUkr|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/AtUkr|contribs]]) 20:17, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
:::::Weird: several of these were already imported, but several not. Looks like I imported the category, but not all course materials were categorized. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 21:02, 18 August 2025 (UTC)
== Requested update to [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] ==
Currently, [[Wikiversity:Interface administrators]] is a policy that includes a caveat that interface admins are not required long-term and that user right can only be added for a period of up to two weeks. I am proposing that we remove this qualification and allow for indefinite interface admin status. I think this is useful because there are reasons for tweaking the site CSS or JavaScript (e.g. to comply with dark mode), add gadgets (e.g. importing Cat-a-Lot, which I would like to do), or otherwise modifying the site that could plausibly come up on an irregular basis and requiring the overhead of a bureaucrat to add the user rights is inefficient. In particular, I am also going to request this right if the community accepts indefinite interface admins. Thoughts? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 23:23, 17 August 2025 (UTC)
:And who will then monitor them to make sure they don't damage the project in any way, or abuse the rights acquired in this way? For large projects, this might not be a problem, but for smaller projects like the English Wikiversity, I'm not sure if there are enough users who would say, something is happening here that shouldn't be happening. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 10:28, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
::Anyone would be who. This argument applies to any person with any advanced rights here. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 10:46, 20 August 2025 (UTC)
:I think it is reasonable to allow for longer periods of access than 2 weeks to interface admin and support adjusting the policy to allow for this flexibility. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 04:57, 2 December 2025 (UTC)
::+1 —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Koavf|Koavf]] I agree that the two-week requirement could be revised, but wouldn’t people just request access for a specific purpose anyway? Instead of granting indefinite access, they should request the specific time frame they need the rights for—until the planned fixes are completed—and then request an extension if more time is required. We could remove the two-week criterion while still keeping the access explicitly temporary. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 02:48, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
::I just don't see why this wiki needs to be different than all of the others. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 07:18, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:::There isn’t really much of a need for a permanent one at this point in time [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 09:53, 25 January 2026 (UTC)
:I quite agree with this proposal, so long as they perform the suggested changes as mentioned here. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 04:06, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:: Just to clarify, I support '''indefinite interface admin status'''. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:34, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
:I think there is decent consensus for lengthening this, but not necessarily for indefinite permissions, so does anyone object to me revising it to the standard being 120 days instead of two weeks? I'll check back on this thread in three weeks and if there's no objection, I'll make the change. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:47, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Sure [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:27, 13 April 2026 (UTC)
::Thanks for proposing this, Justin. I agree with the proposal to lengthen the interface admin period from 2 weeks but not indefinitely. Can I check the source(s) for the standard being 120 days (I'm guessing policies on other projects or maybe global policy?)? In any case, I think it is reasonable for us to adopt a similar period. However, note on the current policy discussion page notes from @[[User:Dave Braunschweig|Dave Braunschweig]] arguing for shorter periods to lower risk, that's why it is 2 weeks. But if there are projects that need longer access, that should also be accommodated. Maybe we could adjust the policy to specify that ''interface admin rights can be given for 14 to 120 days depending on how long is required and what is supported by the community''. Sincerely, James -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 08:29, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::There was there was no source for 120: it was just more than 14 and less than infinity. The "14 to 120" also seems reasonable. —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 14:33, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::: On some small/medium-sized wikis, such as English Wikibooks and English Wikiquote for example, indefinite interface administrator access for administrators is allowed, but they tend not to make changes to the CSS and JS page changes unless it's truly necessary. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 14:34, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::It's a good idea to make the length of this right on request or allow to be prolonged. However, IA should test large changes somewhere else, for example on the en.wv mirror, and only after testing it on the mirror, adapt it to the live version. That means I can't imagine a time-consuming operation right now. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:04, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
::::Sorry, what mirror is this? Are you talking about beta.wv? —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 20:32, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::Not beta.wv. Basically somewhere else then on a live wiki. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 20:59, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:::::: Wouldn't testing on a user's own common.css page work anyway? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 21:36, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
:Change made here: https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity%3AInterface_administrators&diff=2807543&oldid=2806289 —[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''vf</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 13:35, 4 May 2026 (UTC)
== Temporary accounts will be rolled out soon ==
<section begin="body"/>
Hello, we are the Wikimedia Foundation [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Product Safety and Integrity|Product Safety and Integrity]] team. We would like to announce that '''we plan to enable [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Trust and Safety Product/Temporary Accounts|temporary accounts]] for this wiki in the week of September 1'''.
Temporary accounts are successfully live on 30 wikis, including many large ones like German, Japanese, and French. The change they bring is especially relevant to logged-out editors, who this feature is designed to protect. But it is also relevant to community members like mentors, patrollers, and admins – anyone who reverts edits, blocks users, or otherwise interacts with logged-out editors as part of keeping the wikis safe and accurate.
'''Why we are building temporary accounts'''
Our wikis should be safer to edit by default for logged-out editors. Temporary accounts allow people to continue editing the wikis without creating an account, while avoiding publicly tying their edits to their IP address. We believe this is in the best interest of our logged-out editors, who make valuable contributions to the wikis and who may later create accounts and grow our community of editors, admins, and other roles. Even though the wikis do warn logged-out editors that their IP address will be associated with their edit, many people may not understand what an IP address is, or that it could be used to connect them to other information about them in ways they might not expect.
Additionally, our moderation software and tools rely too heavily on network origin (IP addresses) to identify users and patterns of activity, especially as IP addresses themselves are becoming less stable as identifiers. Temporary accounts allow for more precise interactions with logged-out editors, including more precise blocks, and can help limit how often we unintentionally end up blocking good-faith users who use the same IP addresses as bad-faith users.
'''How temporary accounts work'''
[[File:Temporary account banner and empty talk page.png|thumb]]
Any time a logged-out user publishes an edit on this wiki, a cookie will be set in this user's browser, and a temporary account tied with this cookie will be automatically created. This account's name will follow the pattern: <code dir=ltr>~2025-12345-67</code> (a tilde, current year, a number). On pages like Recent Changes or page history, this name will be displayed. The cookie will expire 90 days after its creation. As long as it exists, all edits made from this device will be attributed to this temporary account. It will be the same account even if the IP address changes, unless the user clears their cookies or uses a different device or web browser. A record of the IP address used at the time of each edit will be stored for 90 days after the edit. However, only some logged-in users will be able to see it.
'''What does this mean for different groups of users?'''
'''For logged-out editors'''
* This increases privacy: currently, if you do not use a registered account to edit, then everybody can see the IP address for the edits you made, even after 90 days. That will no longer be possible on this wiki.
* If you use a temporary account to edit from different locations in the last 90 days (for example at home and at a coffee shop), the edit history and the IP addresses for all those locations will now be recorded together, for the same temporary account. Users who [[foundation:Special:MyLanguage/Policy:Access_to_temporary_account_IP_addresses|meet the relevant requirements]] will be able to view this data. If this creates any personal security concerns for you, please contact talktohumanrights at wikimedia.org for advice.
'''For community members interacting with logged-out editors'''
* A temporary account is uniquely linked to a device. In comparison, an IP address can be shared with different devices and people (for example, different people at school or at work might have the same IP address).
* Compared to the current situation, it will be safer to assume that a temporary user's talk page belongs to only one person, and messages left there will be read by them. As you can see in the screenshot, temporary account users will receive notifications. It will also be possible to thank them for their edits, ping them in discussions, and invite them to get more involved in the community.
'''For users who use IP address data to moderate and maintain the wiki'''
* '''For patrollers''' who track persistent abusers, investigate violations of policies, etc.: Users who [[foundation:Special:MyLanguage/Policy:Access_to_temporary_account_IP_addresses|meet the requirements]] will be able to reveal temporary users' IP addresses and all contributions made by temporary accounts from a specific IP address or range ([[Special:IPContributions]]). They will also have access to useful information about the IP addresses thanks to the [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Trust and Safety Product/IP Info|IP Info]] feature. Many other pieces of software have been built or adjusted to work with temporary accounts, including AbuseFilter, global blocks, Global User Contributions, and more. (For information for volunteer developers on how to update the code of your tools – see the last part of the message.)
* '''For admins blocking logged-out editors''':
** It will be possible to block many abusers by just blocking their temporary accounts. A blocked person won't be able to create new temporary accounts quickly if the admin selects the [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Autoblock|autoblock]] option.
** It will still be possible to block an IP address or IP range.
* Temporary accounts will not be retroactively applied to contributions made before the deployment. On Special:Contributions, you will be able to see existing IP user contributions, but not new contributions made by temporary accounts on that IP address. Instead, you should use Special:IPContributions for this.
'''Our requests for you, and next steps'''
* If you know of any tools, bots, gadgets etc. using data about IP addresses or being available for logged-out users, you may want to test if they work on [[testwiki:Main_Page|testwiki]] or [[test2wiki:Main_Page|test2wiki]]. If you are a volunteer developer, [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Trust and Safety Product/Temporary Accounts/For developers|read our documentation for developers]], and in particular, the section on [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Trust and Safety Product/Temporary Accounts/For developers#How should I update my code?|how your code might need to be updated]].
* If you want to test the temporary account experience, for example just to check what it feels like, go to testwiki or test2wiki and edit without logging in.
* Tell us if you know of any difficulties that need to be addressed. We will try to help, and if we are not able, we will consider the available options.
* Look at our [[m:Meta:Babel#Temporary_Accounts:_access_to_IP_addresses_and_next_steps|previous message]] about requirements for users without extended rights who may need access to IP addresses.
To learn more about the project, check out [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Trust and Safety Product/Temporary Accounts/FAQ|our FAQ]] – you will find many useful answers there. You may also [[mw:Special:MyLanguage/Trust and Safety Product/Temporary Accounts/Updates|look at the updates]] (we have just posted one) and [[mw:Newsletter:Product Safety and Integrity|subscribe to our new newsletter]]. If you'd like to talk to me (Szymon) off-wiki, you will find me on Discord and Telegram. Thank you!<section end="body" />
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr">[[m:user:NKohli (WMF)|NKohli (WMF)]], [[m:user:SGrabarczuk (WMF)|SGrabarczuk (WMF)]]</bdi> 21:36, 26 August 2025 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:Quiddity (WMF)@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Quiddity_(WMF)/sandbox6&oldid=29181713 -->
rawvcu0sy75vcelqtum6ug35x8e7pbk
Just sustainability transitions: a living review
0
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2026-05-13T12:33:09Z
Jeanne Noiraud
1366702
/* Modelling concepts */
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wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Introduction ==
=== Definition of living review ===
The concept of living systematic reviews is recent (2014), so the definition has been regularly reworked<ref name="Why1">{{Cite Q |Q40040379 }}</ref>. Living systematic reviews complement the older concept of [[literature review]]. Its objective is the same : obtain an accurate overview of the state of scientific knowledge on a subject<ref name="Why1" /><ref name="Why4">{{Cite journal |last=Akl |first=Elie A. |last2=Meerpohl |first2=Joerg J. |last3=Elliott |first3=Julian |last4=Kahale |first4=Lara A. |last5=Schünemann |first5=Holger J. |last6=Agoritsas |first6=Thomas |last7=Hilton |first7=John |last8=Perron |first8=Caroline |last9=Akl |first9=Elie |last10=Hodder |first10=Rebecca |last11=Pestridge |first11=Charlotte |last12=Albrecht |first12=Lauren |last13=Horsley |first13=Tanya |last14=Platt |first14=Joanne |last15=Armstrong |first15=Rebecca |date=2017-11 |title=Living systematic reviews: 4. Living guideline recommendations |url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q50084143 |journal=Journal of Clinical Epidemiology |language=en |volume=91 |pages=47–53 |doi=10.1016/j.jclinepi.2017.08.009}}</ref><ref name=":6">{{Citation|title=Living Systematic Reviews|url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-1566-9_7|publisher=Springer US|work=Meta-Research: Methods and Protocols|date=2022|access-date=2026-01-16|place=New York, NY|isbn=978-1-0716-1566-9|pages=121–134|doi=10.1007/978-1-0716-1566-9_7|language=en|first=Mark|last=Simmonds|first2=Julian H.|last2=Elliott|first3=Anneliese|last3=Synnot|first4=Tari|last4=Turner|editor-first=Evangelos|editor-last=Evangelou|editor2-first=Areti Angeliki|editor2-last=Veroniki}}</ref>. A traditional review may be obsolete by the time it is published, as new studies have emerged between the submission of the manuscript and its publication<ref name="Why1"/><ref name="Why4" /><ref name=":6" />. Living systematic reviews exists to address this common problem<ref name="Why1" /><ref name="Why4" /><ref name=":6" /><ref name=":2">https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2019/05/14/the-death-of-the-literature-review-and-the-rise-of-the-dynamic-knowledge-map/</ref>. It is therefore particularly useful in rapidly evolving fields of research<ref name="Why1" /><ref name=":6" />, such as just transition.
[[wikidata:Q33002955|Knowledge graphs]], a structured representation of knowledge in the form of a graph, linked together by relationships that encode explicit meanings between these entities, are very suitable for conducting living systematic reviews<ref name=":2" /><ref name="Fotopoulou">{{Cite journal|first1=Eleni |last1=Fotopoulou|first2=Ioanna|last2=Mandilara|first3=Anastasios|last3=Zafeiropoulos|first4=Chrysi|last4=Laspidou|first5=Giannis |last5=Adamos|first6=Phoebe|last6=Koundouri|first7=Symeon|last7=Papavassiliou|title=SustainGraph: A knowledge graph for tracking the progress and the interlinking among the sustainable development goals’ targets|journal=Frontiers in environmental science, Frontiers|volume=10|date=2022-10-26|issn=2296-665X|doi=10.3389/FENVS.2022.1003599|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q117837999}}.</ref>. Advances in AI could render certain older methodological types of living systematic reviews obsoletes<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Krlev|first=Gorgi|last2=Hannigan|first2=Tim|last3=Spicer|first3=André|date=2025-01|title=What Makes a Good Review Article? Empirical Evidence From Management and Organization Research|url=https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/annals.2021.0051|journal=Academy of Management Annals|volume=19|issue=1|pages=376–403|doi=10.5465/annals.2021.0051|issn=1941-6520}}</ref>, as IA are useful to extract, filter and classify datas<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.20276v1|title=Enhancing Systematic Reviews with Large Language Models: Using GPT-4 and Kimi|last=Kaptur|first=Dandan Chen|last2=Huang|first2=Yue|date=2025-04-28|website=arXiv.org|language=en|doi=10.48550/arXiv.2504.20276|access-date=2026-01-21|last3=Ji|first3=Xuejun Ryan|last4=Guo|first4=Yanhui|last5=Kaptur|first5=Bradley}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.20276v1|title=Enhancing Systematic Reviews with Large Language Models: Using GPT-4 and Kimi|last=Kaptur|first=Dandan Chen|last2=Huang|first2=Yue|date=2025-04-28|website=arXiv.org|language=en|doi=10.48550/arXiv.2504.20276|access-date=2026-01-21|last3=Ji|first3=Xuejun Ryan|last4=Guo|first4=Yanhui|last5=Kaptur|first5=Bradley}}</ref>. [[Large language models]] (LLM) are "on the rise" (2025), but "not yet ready for use"<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lieberum |first=Judith-Lisa |last2=Toews |first2=Markus |last3=Metzendorf |first3=Maria-Inti |last4=Heilmeyer |first4=Felix |last5=Siemens |first5=Waldemar |last6=Haverkamp |first6=Christian |last7=Böhringer |first7=Daniel |last8=Meerpohl |first8=Joerg J. |last9=Eisele-Metzger |first9=Angelika |date=2025-05 |title=Large language models for conducting systematic reviews: on the rise, but not yet ready for use—a scoping review |url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q134545593|journal=Journal of Clinical Epidemiology |language=en |volume=181 |pages=111746 |doi=10.1016/j.jclinepi.2025.111746}}</ref>.
The living review method relevant for just transition because it includes topic such as energy democracy which necessitate transdisciplinarity and consolidation of fragmented literature<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Droubi|first=Sufyan|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|last3=McCauley|first3=Darren|date=2022-04-01|title=A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137901182|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=86|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444}}</ref>.
=== Definitions of just transition : ===
* «a fair and equitable process of moving towards a post-carbon society’. »<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=McCauley|first=Darren|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|date=2018-08-01|title=Just transition: Integrating climate, energy and environmental justice|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q129947262|journal=Energy Policy|language=English|volume=119|pages=1–7|doi=10.1016/J.ENPOL.2018.04.014}}</ref>.
The concept of just transition originated from global trade unions in the 1980s to promote green jobs creation as a key element of sustainability transitions<ref name=":0" />. However, scholars have broadened the use of this term to develop frameworks for analysing issues of fairness in these transitions<ref name=":0" />. The concept of just transition can be used to bridge various bodies of scholarship : climate justice, environmental justiceand energy justice<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last=Wang|first=Xinxin|last2=Lo|first2=Kevin|date=2021-12-01|title=Just transition: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137209041|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=82|pages=102291|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102291}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite book|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q134545572|title=What is the “Just Transition”?|last=Heffron|first=Raphael J.|date=2021-01-01|pages=9–19|language=English}}</ref> and take into account various aspects of justice including distributional justice, procedural justice, restorative justice, recognition justice<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last=Jenkins|first=Kirsten|last2=McCauley|first2=Darren|last3=Heffron|first3=Raphael|last4=Stephan|first4=Hannes|last5=Rehner|first5=Robert|date=2016-01-01|title=Energy justice: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210566|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=11|pages=174–182|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004}}</ref>.
=== Definition of Procedural justice ===
Procedural justice is about the fairness of decision-making processes related to transitions<ref name=":4" /> such as the inclusion of those impacted by these decisions<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last=Stark|first=Anthony|last2=Gale|first2=Fred|last3=Murphy-Gregory|first3=Hannah|date=2023-05-05|title=Just Transitions’ Meanings: A Systematic Review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210229|journal=Society and Natural Resources|volume=36|issue=10|pages=1277–1297|doi=10.1080/08941920.2023.2207166}}</ref>. Procedural justice can include issues of community and citizen participation in decision making, their political representation their consultation or the integration of their knowledge, with a focus on neglected population (indigenous people, women, gender and ethnic minorities<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jenkins|first=Kirsten|last2=McCauley|first2=Darren|last3=Heffron|first3=Raphael|last4=Stephan|first4=Hannes|last5=Rehner|first5=Robert|date=2016-01-01|title=Energy justice: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210566|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=11|pages=174–182|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004}}</ref>. For example, the participation of affected communities in decisions related to the construction of new infrastructures<ref name=":0" />.
== Methodology ==
=== Wikidata and the semantic web ===<!-- Add introduction to what wikidata is and how the triplet works in a pedagogical manner
-->
=== Database search ===
We conducted preliminary searches in various databases including Web of science, Go Triple, Dimensions and OpenAlex. Web of Science was the database offering the most relevant restults and included the possibility to filter results to display only litterature reviews. Articles metadata were exported (in .ris format) and then imported into the reference manager software Zotero.
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Keywords search
!Database
!Search date
!Filters
!Number of results
|-
|(((TS=(procedural justice OR procedural fairness OR democracy OR participation OR participatory)) AND TS=(sustainability OR energy OR climate)) AND TS=(transition OR transitions)) AND TS=(review OR reviews)
|Web of Science (all databases, all dates)
|December 2025
|Document type: Review Article
|362
|}
=== Article screening ===
Articles abstract were then screened and we selected only articles which were litterature reviews focusing on concepts related to procedural justice as their main topics. We excluded article which were
* Not related to sustainability transition (e.g. sustainable shift in..., hard science papers...)
* Not literature reviews (e.g. review of policies, initiatives, cases, review notes, book review...)
* Not related to procedural justice but to participation into markets, participation in eco-friendly behaviors or included justice consideration only in “future research” suggestions
* Discussing participatory research methodologies (e.g. participatory modelling) without approaching it as an issue of justice, power or democracy
* Discussing procedural justice concepts as key variables or key results without it being the main focus of the paper
=== Importing selected articles into Wikidata ===
To import the selected articles meta-data into Wikidata, we first ran [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/aa9f59271fcb0807fb20c7d0110d26e4 a script] to check if any article was already present in the database. Next we used [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/90acdc3eac4109830db1b3ab855fcb24 another script] that checks the ISSN of the publication in Wikidata and add P-Q-pairs in the extra field of Zotero. Then we exported the articles data using the "export to Wikidata QuickStatements" function of Zotero and use the QuickStatements tool to add them to Wikidata.
Next we used the [[wikidata:Wikidata:Zotero/Cita|Cita]] (V1.0.0-beta.17) Zotero add-on to add articles QID in Zotero. At this point we identified that duplicates had been created in Wikidata (possibly because the initial [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/aa9f59271fcb0807fb20c7d0110d26e4 script] did not work that well because of the recent [[wikidata:Wikidata:SPARQL_query_service/WDQS_graph_split|Graph Split]] on Wikidata). We merged duplicates on wikidata using the [[wikidata:Help:Merge|"Merge" gadget]] on Wikidata. We checked manually for duplicated statments in those items.
=== Article classification through meta-data enrichement ===<!-- Add : What is meta-data enrichement -->
Existing review try to classify existing articles according to various criteria such as industry focus, academic discipline, geography of research sites (countries), stakeholder focus (community, consumer, worker...), type of study (case study, theory development) or methodology (quantitative, qualitative, mixt).<ref name=":5" /> We selected the most relevant properties in Wikidata to reflect these classifications : {{Wikidata entity link|P921}} to describe what the article is about, {{Wikidata entity link|P8363}} to describe its main methodology/research design and {{Wikidata entity link|P6153}} to describe its geographical focus.
==== Main subjects ====
We first read the articles abstracts and listed relevant topics and their Wikidata ID in a shared spreadsheet. These topics were :
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Qid
!Main topic
!Description
|-
|[[d:Q42377797|Q42377797]]
|acceptability
|characteristic of a thing being subject to acceptance for some purpose
|-
|[[d:Q2798912|Q2798912]]
|accountability
|concept of responsibility in ethics, governance and decision-making
|-
|[[d:Q421953|Q421953]]
|actor–network theory
|theory within social science
|-
|[[d:Q84459973|Q84459973]]
|affordability
|
|-
|[[d:Q185836|Q185836]]
|age of a person
|time elapsed since a person was born
|-
|[[d:Q4764988|Q4764988]]
|animal studies
|field in which animals are studied in a variety of cross-disciplinary ways
|-
|[[d:Q4338318|Q4338318]]
|awareness
|state or ability to perceive, to feel, or to be conscious of events, objects, or sensory patterns
|-
|[[d:Q4930066|Q4930066]]
|blue carbon
|carbon captured by the world's coastal ocean ecosystems
|-
|[[d:Q430460|Q430460]]
|capability approach
|economic theory
|-
|[[d:Q7569|Q7569]]
|child
|human between birth and puberty
|-
|[[d:Q4116870|Q4116870]]
|civic engagement
|individual or group activity addressing issues of public concern
|-
|[[d:Q125928|Q125928]]
|climate change
|human-caused changes to climate on Earth
|-
|[[d:Q260607|Q260607]]
|climate change
adaptation
|process of adjustment to actual or expected climate change and its effects, seeking to moderate or avoid harm or exploit beneficial opportunities
|-
|[[d:Q1291678|Q1291678]]
|climate justice
|term linking the climate crisis with environmental and social justice
|-
|[[d:Q2270945|Q2270945]]
|co-creation
|product or service design process in which input from consumers plays a central role
|-
|[[d:Q16972712|Q16972712]]
|co-design
|approach to design attempting to actively involve all stakeholders
|-
|[[d:Q16324410|Q16324410]]
|coproduction
|product or service design process in which input from consumers plays a central role
|-
|[[d:Q11024|Q11024]]
|communication
|act of conveying intended meaning
|-
|[[d:Q177634|Q177634]]
|community
|social unit of human organisms who share common values
|-
|[[d:Q5154673|Q5154673]]
|community choice aggregation
|alternative energy supply system
|-
|[[d:Q113514984|Q113514984]]
|community energy
|delivery of community-led renewable energy, energy demand reduction and energy supply projects
|-
|[[d:Q65807646|Q65807646]]
|community participation
|The taking part by members of a community in decisionmaking processes related to the development of their community
|-
|[[d:Q188843|Q188843]]
|cosmopolitanism
|ideology that all human beings belong to a single community, based on a shared morality
|-
|[[d:Q11693783|Q11693783]]
|decarbonization
|change of economy, especially of energy industries, towards lower carbon dioxide emissions
|-
|[[d:Q284289|Q284289]]
|deliberative democracy
|form of democracy focusing on consensus
|-
|[[d:Q7174|Q7174]]
|democracy
|form of government
|-
|[[d:Q552284|Q552284]]
|distributive justice
|concept of the socially just allocation of goods
|-
|[[d:Q1230584|Q1230584]]
|diversity
|concept in sociology and political studies
|-
|[[d:Q1049066|Q1049066]]
|ecological economics
|research field on the interdependence of human economies and natural ecosystems
|-
|[[d:Q8134|Q8134]]
|economics
|social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
|-
|[[d:Q868575|Q868575]]
|empowerment
|providing increased autonomy
|-
|[[d:Q295865|Q295865]]
|ecosystem service
|benefits created by nature, forests and environmental systems
|-
|[[d:Q138359220|Q138359220]]
|energy citizenship
|involvement of citizens in energy-related decisions
|-
|[https://www.wikidata.org/w/index.php?title=Q131444737&redirect=no Q131444737]
|community energy
|[redirection]
|-
|[[d:Q16869822|Q16869822]]
|energy consumption
|amount of energy or power used
|-
|[[d:Q1358789|Q1358789]]
|senior
|elderly person
|-
|[[d:Q14944319|Q14944319]]
|energy democracy
|concept in environmental justice movement
|-
|[[d:Q192704|Q192704]]
|energy efficiency
|ratio between the useful energy output and the input of a machine
|-
|[[d:Q24965464|Q24965464]]
|energy modeling
|process of building computer models of energy systems in order to analyze them
|-
|[[d:Q1805337|Q1805337]]
|energy policy
|policy addressing energy issues
|-
|[[d:Q1341244|Q1341244]]
|energy poverty
|lack of access to modern energy services
|-
|[[d:Q3406659|Q3406659]]
|energy production
|conversion of energy from a primary source into a form useful to humans
|-
|[[d:Q117091181|Q117091181]]
|energy justice
|subconcept of economic equality
|-
|[[d:Q3456219|Q3456219]]
|energy renovation
|building works aimed at reducing energy consumption and decarbonising the energy sources used
|-
|[[d:Q2700433|Q2700433]]
|energy security
|national security considerations of energy availability
|-
|[[d:Q837718|Q837718]]
|energy storage
|capture of energy produced at one time for use at a later time
|-
|[[d:Q795757|Q795757]]
|energy transition
|long-term structural change towards sustainable energy systems
|-
|[[d:Q1479527|Q1479527]]
|environmental justice
|system of fairness
|-
|[[d:Q771773|Q771773]]
|fairness
|concept in sociology and generally the interaction of society
|-
|[[d:Q56395513|Q56395513]]
|farming system
|method of agricultural production defined by its physical practices and economic characteristics
|-
|[[d:Q5465532|Q5465532]]
|food system
|all processes and infrastructure involved in feeding a population
|-
|[[d:Q4421|Q4421]]
|forest
|dense collection of trees covering a relatively large area
|-
|[[d:Q48277|Q48277]]
|gender
|social concept which distinguish the different gender categories
|-
|[[d:Q1553864|Q1553864]]
|governance
|all of the processes of governing, whether undertaken by a government, market or network, whether over a family, tribe, formal or informal organization or territory and whether through the laws, norms, power or language of an organized society
|-
|[[d:Q8458|Q8458]]
|human rights
|inalienable fundamental rights to which a person is inherently entitled
|-
|[[d:Q11376059|Q11376059]]
|human rights violation
|act or omission which contravene the principles of human rights
|-
|[[d:Q103817|Q103817]]
|indigenous people
|first inhabitants of an area and their descendants
|-
|[[d:Q113561794|Q113561794]]
|indigenous science
|indigenous knowledge applied to the scientific method
|-
|[[d:Q770480|Q770480]]
|injustice
|quality relating to unfairness or undeserved outcomes
|-
|[[d:Q17142211|Q17142211]]
|interactional justice
|the perceived appropriateness of interpersonal treatment
|-
|[[d:Q1516555|Q1516555]]
|intersectionnality
|theoretical framework of multidimensional oppression
|-
|[[d:Q6316391|Q6316391]]
|just transition
|Framework developed by the trade union movement to encompass wide range of social interventions needed to secure decent work opportunities and a greener economy.
|-
|[[d:Q366139|Q366139]]
|legitimation
|the process of making something acceptable and normative to a group
|-
|[[d:Q3027857|Q3027857]]
|living lab
|user-centered, open innovation ecosystem integrating research and innovation in real life communities
|-
|[[d:Q59679511|Q59679511]]
|low income
|home with little money
|-
|[[d:Q43619|Q43619]]
|natural environment
|all living and non-living things occurring naturally on Earth or some region thereof
|-
|[[d:Q127514833|Q127514833]]
|nature-positive
|global goal to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030
|-
|[[d:Q13023682|Q13023682]]
|non-human
|organism not in the genus Homo
|-
|[[d:Q728646|Q728646]]
|partnership
|arrangement in which parties agree to cooperate to advance their mutual interests
|-
|[[d:Q3907287|Q3907287]]
|policy making
|the act of developing policy
|-
|[[d:Q9357091|Q9357091]]
|political theory
|class of theory
|-
|[[d:Q265425|Q265425]]
|postcolonialism
|academic discipline
|-
|[[d:Q25107|Q25107]]
|power
|ability to influence the behavior of others
|-
|[[d:Q442100|Q442100]]
|procedural justice
|fairness in the processes that resolve disputes and allocate resources
|-
|[[d:Q7249406|Q7249406]]
|project governance
|management framework
|-
|[[d:Q7257735|Q7257735]]
|public engagement
|Policy-making practice
|-
|[[d:Q541936|Q541936]]
|public participation
|participation of citizens in various policy decisions and planning processes
|-
|[[d:Q6142016|Q6142016]]
|recognition justice
|social philosophy theory
|-
|[[d:Q10509953|Q10509953]]
|renewable electricity
|electricity from renweable sources
|-
|[[d:Q12705|Q12705]]
|renewable energy
|energy collected from renewable resources
|-
|[[d:Q56510941|Q56510941]]
|renewable energy policy
|
|-
|[[d:Q1165392|Q1165392]]
|restorative justice
|approach to justice where victims and perpetrators mediate a restitution agreement
|-
|[[d:Q4414036|Q4414036]]
|rural population
|inhabitants of rural areas or of small towns classified as rural
|-
|[[d:Q17152351|Q17152351]]
|smart system
|adaptive intelligent systems
|-
|[[d:Q187588|Q187588]]
|social class
|group of people categorized in a hierarchy based on socioeconomic factors
|-
|[[d:Q264892|Q264892]]
|social justice
|concept that discrimination recognized in society should be remedied
|-
|[[d:Q34749|Q34749]]
|social science
|academic disciplines concerned with society and the relationships between individuals in society
|-
|[[d:Q2930198|Q2930198]]
|stakeholder participation
|involvement of groups or individuals affected by the actions of an entity
|-
|[[d:Q125359881|Q125359881]]
|sustainability transition
|
|-
|[[d:Q219416|Q219416]]
|sustainability
|ability of human civilization to coexist with the biosphere in a steady state
|-
|[[d:Q131201|Q131201]]
|sustainable development
|mode of human development that meets current demands without compromising the needs of future generations
|-
|[[d:Q7649586|Q7649586]]
|Sustainable Development Goals
|set of United Nations-defined global development goals and climate change
|-
|[[d:Q69883|Q69883]]
|urban planning
|technical and political process concerned with the use of land and design of the urban environment
|-
|[[d:Q920600|Q920600]]
|urban renewal
|program of land redevelopment in cities, often where there is urban decay
|-
|[[d:Q3376054|Q3376054]]
|vulnerable population
|group of persons whose range of options is severely limited, are subjected to coercion, or who may be compromised in their ability to give informed consent
|-
|[[d:Q107389921|Q107389921]]
|water-management
|
|-
|[[d:Q7981051|Q7981051]]
|well-being
|measure of how well life is to someone or a group with factors such as health, happiness and satisfaction
|-
|[[d:Q467|Q467]]
|woman
|female adult human
|-
|[[d:Q188867|Q188867]]
|future studies
|study of possible, probable, and preferable social, technological and political futures
|-
|[[d:Q1038171|Q1038171]]
|participatory design
|active involvement of all stakeholders in the design process
|}
<!-- include all below items using the wikidata link template
-->
Then, for each article, we inferred what the {{Wikidata entity link|P921}} was from the abstracts and author provided keywords.
==== Study types ====
Our review included only litterature reviews. We first read abstracts to identify all the [https://angryloki.github.io/wikidata-graph-builder/?item=Q2412849&property=P279&mode=reverse different types of litterature reviews] present in the corpus and created wikidata items which did not exist, for example {{Wikidata entity link|Q137209848}} and {{Wikidata entity link|Q137174203}}. We improved these method items using the methodological references cited in the reviewed papers. The types of reviews were :
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Qid
!Study type
!Description
|-
|[[d:Q603441|Q603441]]
|bibliometrics
|statistical analysis of written publications, such as books or articles
|-
|[[d:Q472342|Q472342]]
|scientometrics
|study of measuring and analysing science, technology and innovation
|-
|[[d:Q815382|Q815382]]
|meta-analysis
|statistical method that summarizes data from multiple sources
|-
|[[d:Q1504425|Q1504425]]
|systematic review
|publication type, study that gathers, analyzes, and communicates the results of research and information on a topic
|-
|[[d:Q2412849|Q2412849]]
|literature review
|process of information search and text of a review article (Q7318358), which includes the current knowledge including substantive findings, as well as theoretical and methodological contributions to a particular topic
|-
|[[d:Q6822263|Q6822263]]
|meta-regression
|statistical tool used in meta-analyses
|-
|[[d:Q7301211|Q7301211]]
|realist evaluation
|[...]
|-
|[[d:Q17007303|Q17007303]]
|combinatorial meta-analysis
|[...]
|-
|[[d:Q70470634|Q70470634]]
|network meta-analysis
|meta-analysis of randomized trials in which estimates of comparative treatment effects are visualized and interpreted from a network of interventions
|-
|[[d:Q101116078|Q101116078]]
|scoping review
|search for concepts by mapping the language and data which surrounds those concepts and adjusting the search method iteratively to synthesize evidence and assess the scope of an area of inquiry
|-
|[[d:Q110665014|Q110665014]]
|narrative review
|type of literature review, without structured method of retrieval and analysis
|-
|[[d:Q137174203|Q137174203]]
|conceptual review
|academic research aiming to review existing concepts and definitions in the litterature
|-
|[[d:Q137174450|Q137174450]]
|critical review
|type of literature review analysing strenghts, major contributions, mistakes and neglected issues in an academic field of research
|-
|[[d:Q137209848|Q137209848]]
|integrative literature review
|type of literature review
|-
|[[d:Q110665014|Q137211242]]
|narrative review
|type of literature review, without structured method of retrieval and analysis
|}<!-- include all below items using the wikidata link template
-->
[Include list and description of types of litterature reviews]
Then, we added the {{Wikidata entity link|P8363}} of each articles based on the abstract and method sections. In case of doubt, we compared our interpretation.
==== Research site ====
When an article had a specific geographical focus, we used the property {{Wikidata entity link|P6153}} to describe it. For example, the article "{{Wikidata entity link|Q137901202}}" focused on {{Wikidata entity link|Q132959}}.
==== Results ====
[insert table about the sample]
=== Knowledge modelling ===
Concept maps can be a powerful literature review tool<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Lewis|first=John Kennedy|date=2016|title=Using ATLAS.ti to Facilitate Data Analysis for a Systematic Review of Leadership Competencies in the Completion of a Doctoral Dissertation|url=https://www.ssrn.com/abstract=2850726|journal=SSRN Electronic Journal|language=en|doi=10.2139/ssrn.2850726|issn=1556-5068}}</ref> allowing to synthetize theoretical statements about relationship between concepts<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Panniers|first=Teresa L|last2=Feuerbach|first2=Renee Daiuta|last3=Soeken|first3=Karen L|date=2003-08-01|title=Methods in informatics: using data derived from a systematic review of health care texts to develop a concept map for use in the neonatal intensive care setting|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1532046403000911|journal=Journal of Biomedical Informatics|series=Building Nursing Knowledge through Informatics: From Concept Representation to Data Mining|volume=36|issue=4|pages=232–239|doi=10.1016/j.jbi.2003.09.010|issn=1532-0464}}</ref>. In the present study, we explored how concept map can be used to model the knowledge present in the paper we selected.
[define knowledge modelling]
==== Conceptual modelling ====
We first reflected on what kind of wikidata properties could be used to represent concepts and theories in wikidata. Capturing the content of a concept is not straightforward and there are various approaches coming from psychology and philosophy on the matter<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Origin of Concepts|last=Carey|first=Susan|date=2011|publisher=Oxford University Press USA - OSO|isbn=978-0-19-536763-8|series=Oxford Series in Cognitive Development Ser|location=Cary}}</ref> we summarize these approaches below and examine which wikidata properties exist to represent them.
* Definition: the content of a concept can be formed by its decomposition into other concepts. Many Wikidata properties can be relevant to model definitions, for example: {{Wikidata entity link|P1269}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P361}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P527}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P2670}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P1552}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P6477}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}}...
* Categorization: the content of a concept is formed by its illustration by an exemplar (a [[wikipedia:Prototype_theory|prototype]]) that best represent the concept. Apart from the inclusion of images to illustrate an item, Wikidata structure do not highlight exemplars. However, properties signifying relations of categorizations are among the most used with {{Wikidata entity link|P31}} and {{Wikidata entity link|P279}}.
* Theory: the content of a concept is formed by its role in providing explanation of the world. Wikidata includes several properties to describe causal relationships: {{Wikidata entity link|P828}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P1542}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P1537}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P1479}}.
* Essence: the content of a concept is "something" deep explaning the entity's existence and its properties. We can use concepts before knowing what they mean, and this is what allows us to revise our knowledge about it. The idea of essence is well represented by the QID of Wikidata entities: it is independent of language and definitions and we can create it before really knowing what all its properties will be.
* Origin: the content of the concept is determined causally by social and historial factors (e.g. someone inventing the concept and introducing its use in a language community). This can be represented by the property {{Wikidata entity link|P3938}}.
==== Thematic networks ====
[[File:Thematic network example.jpg|thumb|547x547px|Structure of a thematic network (Source: Attride-Stirling 2001)]]
A thematic network is “simply a way of organizing a thematic analysis of qualitative data”<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|last=Attride-Stirling|first=Jennifer|date=2001-12|title=Thematic networks: an analytic tool for qualitative research|url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/146879410100100307|journal=Qualitative Research|language=en|volume=1|issue=3|pages=385–405|doi=10.1177/146879410100100307|issn=1468-7941}}</ref>. It is compatible with classical coding strategies such as [[grounded theory]]<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Corbin|first=Juliet|last2=Strauss|first2=Anselm|date=1990-12-01|title=Grounded Theory Research: Procedures, Canons and Evaluative Criteria|url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/zfsoz-1990-0602/html|journal=Zeitschrift für Soziologie|language=en|volume=19|issue=6|pages=418–427|doi=10.1515/zfsoz-1990-0602|issn=2366-0325}}</ref>. Thematic networks can be used to visualise the data structure after identifying themes and help structure and interpret the data<ref name=":7" />. The principle is to assemble basic themes into more general themes.
Qualitative researchers usually use {{Wikidata entity link|Q4550939}} and qualitative coding (e.g. grounded theory) to identify themes and sub-themes.
However, the nature of the relationship between these various themes and sub-themes is often not specified.
*
==== Causal networks ====
The use of diagrams to represent causal relationship exist in various research practices. In statistics, researchers sometime present models with boxes and arrows representing correlations and/or causations<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://mirror.vcu.edu/pub/mx/doc/mxmang10.pdf|title=Statistical Modeling|last=Neale|first=Michael C.|last2=Boker|first2=Steven M.|last3=Xie|first3=Gary|last4=Maes|first4=Hermine H.|publisher=Richmond, VA: Department of Psychiatry|year=1999|location=Virginia Commonwealth University}}</ref>. In qualitative research, building grounded theory models is about "[accounting] for not only all the major emergent concepts, themes, and dimensions, but also for their dynamic interrelationships. Speaking in classic boxes-and-arrows terms, this process amounts to assembling the constellation of boxes with a special focus on the arrows."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Gioia|first=Dennis A.|last2=Corley|first2=Kevin G.|last3=Hamilton|first3=Aimee L.|date=2013-01|title=Seeking Qualitative Rigor in Inductive Research: Notes on the Gioia Methodology|url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1094428112452151|journal=Organizational Research Methods|language=en|volume=16|issue=1|pages=15–31|doi=10.1177/1094428112452151|issn=1094-4281}}</ref> Researchers relying on system theory also use causal loop diagram where boxes represent variables and arrows represent causal influence (positive or negative), causal relationship can "feedback" (two variables can influence each other)<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-031-01919-7_4|title=Causal Loop Diagrams|last=Barbrook-Johnson|first=Pete|last2=Penn|first2=Alexandra S.|date=2022|publisher=Springer International Publishing|isbn=978-3-031-01833-6|location=Cham|pages=47–59|language=en|doi=10.1007/978-3-031-01919-7_4}}</ref>.
Wikidata includes several properties to describe causal relationships:
* {{Wikidata entity link|P828}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1542}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1537}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1479}} : it is difficult to identify single causes for social phenomenons, many factors having an effect on the subject item will likely be contributing factors
==== Modelling concepts ====
To model concepts related to just transition. We read the selected papers and used them as source to build a knowledge graph in wikidata. For example, the paper {{Wikidata entity link|Q137901182}} mention "Energy democracy is both an ideal and a process"<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Droubi|first=Sufyan|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|last3=McCauley|first3=Darren|date=2022-04-01|title=A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137901182|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=86|pages=4|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444}}</ref>, we thus entered the wikidata statement {{Wikidata entity link|Q14944319}} is an {{Wikidata entity link|P31}} {{Wikidata entity link|Q840396}}, using the paper as source.
Challenges :
*{{Wikidata entity link|P31}}: concepts have a dual nature because they designate at the same time an idea and the entity that this idea represent.
* {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}}: concepts do not have goals in themselves, but the reality they represent can have goals
* wikidata current items are not really suited to model "meta-research" statements. For example, modelling the idea tha the literature on energy democracy is fragmented would require creating an item representing the energy democracy literature, not just energy democracy in general. Similarly, it can be difficult to model the chronological evolution of the definition of an idea (although it could be technically possible).
* To distinguish the causes of the concepts/discourses and the causes of the phenomenon itself, we used {{Wikidata entity link|P3938}} to indicate the origins of the concept or the movements promoting it.
* To distinguish goals from the process to reach it, we used {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}} to describe ideals and {{Wikidata entity link|P2670}} to describe processes.
* Wikidata does not seem to be the best tool to model quantitative statements, for example, the paper {{Wikidata entity link|Q137901196}} states that "9.8% of the final energy consumed in developing countries comes from modern renewable energy sources". Including energy data in Wikidata require using or creating specific properties (e.g. {{Wikidata entity link|P6826}})
* It is hard to represent in Wikidata affirmations related to missing knowlege, propositions of untested hypothesis, critique of existing research or research agenda recommandations
Advantages :
* Link toward unique identifiers for concepts, but also laws (e.g. {{Wikidata entity link|Q139764294}})
=== Writing ===
To cite articles we used the [[Template:Cite Q|Cite Q template.]] Each reference is an item in Wikidata and the template retrieve the necessary data to generate the citation references below.
== Data ==
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! QID !! Year !! DOI !! Title
|-
| [[d:Q137901191|Q137901191]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1002/GEO2.70040 10.1002/GEO2.70040] || Place-Based Sustainability Transformations for Just Futures: A Systematic Review
|-
| [[d:Q137901187|Q137901187]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1002/WCC.932 10.1002/WCC.932] || Public Communication of Climate and Justice: A Scoping Review
|-
| [[d:Q135979013|Q135979013]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S13280-025-02202-Z 10.1007/S13280-025-02202-Z] || Participatory approaches to climate adaptation, resilience, and mitigation: A systematic review
|-
| [[d:Q137901223|Q137901223]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S13412-021-00726-W 10.1007/S13412-021-00726-W] || A review of stakeholder participation studies in renewable electricity and water: does the resource context matter?
|-
| [[d:Q137901184|Q137901184]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S40518-021-00184-6 10.1007/S40518-021-00184-6] || Energy Storage as an Equity Asset.
|-
| [[d:Q114204627|Q114204627]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S43621-021-00024-Z 10.1007/S43621-021-00024-Z] || Can public awareness, knowledge and engagement improve climate change adaptation policies?
|-
| [[d:Q137901209|Q137901209]] || 2026 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.AGSY.2025.104512 10.1016/J.AGSY.2025.104512] || Designing with non-humans for agricultural systems transformation: An interdisciplinary review and framework for reflection
|-
| [[d:Q137901201|Q137901201]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.COPSYC.2024.101987 10.1016/J.COPSYC.2024.101987] || Individual and community catalysts for Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) development
|-
| [[d:Q114197507|Q114197507]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.CRM.2022.100438 10.1016/J.CRM.2022.100438] || Advancements of sustainable development goals in co-production for climate change adaptation research
|-
| [[d:Q129203992|Q129203992]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.EGYR.2024.01.040 10.1016/J.EGYR.2024.01.040] || Empowering energy citizenship: Exploring dimensions and drivers in citizen engagement during the energy transition
|-
| [[d:Q137901216|Q137901216]] || 2026 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.EIAR.2025.108187 10.1016/J.EIAR.2025.108187] || From participation to partnership: A systematic review of public engagement in sustainable urban planning
|-
| [[d:Q137210566|Q137210566]] || 2016 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004 10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004] || Energy justice: A conceptual review
|-
| [[d:Q115448818|Q115448818]] || 2016 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2016.04.001 10.1016/J.ERSS.2016.04.001] || Stakeholder involvement in sustainability science—A critical view
|-
| [[d:Q129652515|Q129652515]] || 2018 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010 10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010] || What is energy democracy? Connecting social science energy research and political theory
|-
| [[d:Q137901196|Q137901196]] || 2020 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101716 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101716] || Of renewable energy, energy democracy, and sustainable development: A roadmap to accelerate the energy transition in developing countries
|-
| [[d:Q136447761|Q136447761]] || 2020 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101768 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101768] || Energy democracy as a process, an outcome and a goal: A conceptual review
|-
| [[d:Q137901204|Q137901204]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101834 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101834] || Identities, innovation, and governance: A systematic review of co-creation in wind energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901183|Q137901183]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101837 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101837] || Renewable energy for whom? A global systematic review of the environmental justice implications of renewable energy technologies
|-
| [[d:Q137901207|Q137901207]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101871 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101871] || Rethinking community empowerment in the energy transformation: A critical review of the definitions, drivers and outcomes
|-
| [[d:Q137901215|Q137901215]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101876 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101876] || Co-production in the wind energy sector: A systematic literature review of public engagement beyond invited stakeholder participation
|-
| [[d:Q114306511|Q114306511]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101907 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101907] || From consultation toward co-production in science and policy: A critical systematic review of participatory climate and energy initiatives
|-
| [[d:Q137901221|Q137901221]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102257 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102257] || The challenges of engaging island communities: Lessons on renewable energy from a review of 17 case studies
|-
| [[d:Q137901218|Q137901218]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102333 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102333] || The (in)justices of smart local energy systems: A systematic review, integrated framework, and future research agenda
|-
| [[d:Q137901182|Q137901182]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444] || A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?
|-
| [[d:Q114306483|Q114306483]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102482 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102482] || The role of energy democracy and energy citizenship for participatory energy transitions: A comprehensive review
|-
| [[d:Q114306476|Q114306476]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102714 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102714] || What about citizens? A literature review of citizen engagement in sustainability transitions research
|-
| [[d:Q137901193|Q137901193]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102862 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102862] || When energy justice is contested: A systematic review of a decade of research on Sweden?s conflicted energy landscape
|-
| [[d:Q137901219|Q137901219]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102913 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102913] || Can we optimise for justice? Reviewing the inclusion of energy justice in energy system optimisation models
|-
| [[d:Q137901186|Q137901186]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103010 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103010] || Analysing intersections of justice with energy transitions in India- A systematic literature review
|-
| [[d:Q137901181|Q137901181]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103053 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103053] || Fostering justice through engagement: A literature review of public engagement in energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137211155|Q137211155]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103213 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103213] || A fairway to fairness: Toward a richer conceptualization of fairness perceptions for just energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901217|Q137901217]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103221 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103221] || Powering just energy transitions: A review of the justice implications of community choice aggregation
|-
| [[d:Q137901199|Q137901199]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104016 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104016] || Making energy renovations equitable: A literature review of decision-making criteria for a just energy transition in residential buildings
|-
| [[d:Q137901188|Q137901188]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104036 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104036] || Community energy justice: A review of origins, convergence, and a research agenda
|-
| [[d:Q137901211|Q137901211]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104067 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104067] || Psychological and social factors driving citizen involvement in renewable energy communities: A systematic review
|-
| [[d:Q137901192|Q137901192]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104149 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104149] || Assessing social impacts and Energy Justice along green hydrogen supply chains: a capability-based framework
|-
| [[d:Q137901195|Q137901195]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104422 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104422] || Out of place, scale and time? Navigating injustices across mission arenas of the German Energiewende
|-
| [[d:Q137901185|Q137901185]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ESD.2024.101546 10.1016/J.ESD.2024.101546] || Characterizing 'injustices' in clean energy transitions in Africa
|-
| [[d:Q137901226|Q137901226]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JCLEPRO.2024.143470 10.1016/J.JCLEPRO.2024.143470] || Energy justice and sustainable urban renewal: A systematic review of low-income old town communities
|-
| [[d:Q137901222|Q137901222]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JENVMAN.2024.120804 10.1016/J.JENVMAN.2024.120804] || Forest, climate, and policy literature lacks acknowledgement of environmental justice, diversity, equity, and inclusion
|-
| [[d:Q115441381|Q115441381]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.RSER.2021.111504 10.1016/J.RSER.2021.111504] || Participatory methods in energy system modelling and planning – A review
|-
| [[d:Q137901205|Q137901205]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.RSER.2025.115892 10.1016/J.RSER.2025.115892] || A systematic review of the intersection between energy justice and human rights
|-
| [[d:Q137901225|Q137901225]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1017/SUS.2024.24 10.1017/SUS.2024.24] || Blue carbon as just transition? A structured literature review
|-
| [[d:Q137901220|Q137901220]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1017/SUS.2025.2 10.1017/SUS.2025.2] || Toward an intersectional equity approach in social-ecological transformations
|-
| [[d:Q137901203|Q137901203]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2023.2256697 10.1080/14693062.2023.2256697] || Exploring the democracy-climate nexus: a review of correlations between democracy and climate policy performance
|-
| [[d:Q137901164|Q137901164]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1111/GEC3.12662 10.1111/GEC3.12662] || Creating fairer futures for sustainability transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901227|Q137901227]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1139/ER-2024-0018 10.1139/ER-2024-0018] || Community engagement in nature-positive food systems programming and research in East and Southern Africa: a review
|-
| [[d:Q119955266|Q119955266]] || 2019 || [https://doi.org/10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-101718-033103 10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-101718-033103] || Co-Producing Sustainability: Reordering the Governance of Science, Policy, and Practice
|-
| [[d:Q137901206|Q137901206]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-112621-063400 10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-112621-063400] || Metrics for Decision-Making in Energy Justice
|-
| [[d:Q137901213|Q137901213]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1186/S13705-021-00330-4 10.1186/S13705-021-00330-4] || Mapping emergent public engagement in societal transitions: a scoping review
|-
| [[d:Q137901163|Q137901163]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.17573/CEPAR.2025.2.09 10.17573/CEPAR.2025.2.09] || From Co-Creation to Circular Cities: Exploring Living Labs in EU Governance Frameworks - A Literature Review
|-
| [[d:Q137901197|Q137901197]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/EN17143512 10.3390/EN17143512] || A Systematic Review on the Path to Inclusive and Sustainable Energy Transitions
|-
| [[d:Q104887325|Q104887325]] || 2019 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU11041023 10.3390/SU11041023] || Deliberation and the Promise of a Deeply Democratic Sustainability Transition
|-
| [[d:Q137901202|Q137901202]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU13042128 10.3390/SU13042128] || A Review of Energy Communities in Sub-Saharan Africa as a Transition Pathway to Energy Democracy
|-
| [[d:Q137901210|Q137901210]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU15032441 10.3390/SU15032441] || Sustainable Project Governance: Scientometric Analysis and Emerging Trends
|-
| [[d:Q137901224|Q137901224]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU16198700 10.3390/SU16198700] || Empowering Communities to Act for a Change: A Review of the Community Empowerment Programs towards Sustainability and Resilience
|}
== References ==
{{References}}
no0n32aiztb5wizh4573e9w22kfehit
2808872
2808865
2026-05-13T13:21:53Z
Jeanne Noiraud
1366702
/* Modelling concepts */
2808872
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Introduction ==
=== Definition of living review ===
The concept of living systematic reviews is recent (2014), so the definition has been regularly reworked<ref name="Why1">{{Cite Q |Q40040379 }}</ref>. Living systematic reviews complement the older concept of [[literature review]]. Its objective is the same : obtain an accurate overview of the state of scientific knowledge on a subject<ref name="Why1" /><ref name="Why4">{{Cite journal |last=Akl |first=Elie A. |last2=Meerpohl |first2=Joerg J. |last3=Elliott |first3=Julian |last4=Kahale |first4=Lara A. |last5=Schünemann |first5=Holger J. |last6=Agoritsas |first6=Thomas |last7=Hilton |first7=John |last8=Perron |first8=Caroline |last9=Akl |first9=Elie |last10=Hodder |first10=Rebecca |last11=Pestridge |first11=Charlotte |last12=Albrecht |first12=Lauren |last13=Horsley |first13=Tanya |last14=Platt |first14=Joanne |last15=Armstrong |first15=Rebecca |date=2017-11 |title=Living systematic reviews: 4. Living guideline recommendations |url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q50084143 |journal=Journal of Clinical Epidemiology |language=en |volume=91 |pages=47–53 |doi=10.1016/j.jclinepi.2017.08.009}}</ref><ref name=":6">{{Citation|title=Living Systematic Reviews|url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-1566-9_7|publisher=Springer US|work=Meta-Research: Methods and Protocols|date=2022|access-date=2026-01-16|place=New York, NY|isbn=978-1-0716-1566-9|pages=121–134|doi=10.1007/978-1-0716-1566-9_7|language=en|first=Mark|last=Simmonds|first2=Julian H.|last2=Elliott|first3=Anneliese|last3=Synnot|first4=Tari|last4=Turner|editor-first=Evangelos|editor-last=Evangelou|editor2-first=Areti Angeliki|editor2-last=Veroniki}}</ref>. A traditional review may be obsolete by the time it is published, as new studies have emerged between the submission of the manuscript and its publication<ref name="Why1"/><ref name="Why4" /><ref name=":6" />. Living systematic reviews exists to address this common problem<ref name="Why1" /><ref name="Why4" /><ref name=":6" /><ref name=":2">https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2019/05/14/the-death-of-the-literature-review-and-the-rise-of-the-dynamic-knowledge-map/</ref>. It is therefore particularly useful in rapidly evolving fields of research<ref name="Why1" /><ref name=":6" />, such as just transition.
[[wikidata:Q33002955|Knowledge graphs]], a structured representation of knowledge in the form of a graph, linked together by relationships that encode explicit meanings between these entities, are very suitable for conducting living systematic reviews<ref name=":2" /><ref name="Fotopoulou">{{Cite journal|first1=Eleni |last1=Fotopoulou|first2=Ioanna|last2=Mandilara|first3=Anastasios|last3=Zafeiropoulos|first4=Chrysi|last4=Laspidou|first5=Giannis |last5=Adamos|first6=Phoebe|last6=Koundouri|first7=Symeon|last7=Papavassiliou|title=SustainGraph: A knowledge graph for tracking the progress and the interlinking among the sustainable development goals’ targets|journal=Frontiers in environmental science, Frontiers|volume=10|date=2022-10-26|issn=2296-665X|doi=10.3389/FENVS.2022.1003599|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q117837999}}.</ref>. Advances in AI could render certain older methodological types of living systematic reviews obsoletes<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Krlev|first=Gorgi|last2=Hannigan|first2=Tim|last3=Spicer|first3=André|date=2025-01|title=What Makes a Good Review Article? Empirical Evidence From Management and Organization Research|url=https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/annals.2021.0051|journal=Academy of Management Annals|volume=19|issue=1|pages=376–403|doi=10.5465/annals.2021.0051|issn=1941-6520}}</ref>, as IA are useful to extract, filter and classify datas<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.20276v1|title=Enhancing Systematic Reviews with Large Language Models: Using GPT-4 and Kimi|last=Kaptur|first=Dandan Chen|last2=Huang|first2=Yue|date=2025-04-28|website=arXiv.org|language=en|doi=10.48550/arXiv.2504.20276|access-date=2026-01-21|last3=Ji|first3=Xuejun Ryan|last4=Guo|first4=Yanhui|last5=Kaptur|first5=Bradley}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.20276v1|title=Enhancing Systematic Reviews with Large Language Models: Using GPT-4 and Kimi|last=Kaptur|first=Dandan Chen|last2=Huang|first2=Yue|date=2025-04-28|website=arXiv.org|language=en|doi=10.48550/arXiv.2504.20276|access-date=2026-01-21|last3=Ji|first3=Xuejun Ryan|last4=Guo|first4=Yanhui|last5=Kaptur|first5=Bradley}}</ref>. [[Large language models]] (LLM) are "on the rise" (2025), but "not yet ready for use"<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lieberum |first=Judith-Lisa |last2=Toews |first2=Markus |last3=Metzendorf |first3=Maria-Inti |last4=Heilmeyer |first4=Felix |last5=Siemens |first5=Waldemar |last6=Haverkamp |first6=Christian |last7=Böhringer |first7=Daniel |last8=Meerpohl |first8=Joerg J. |last9=Eisele-Metzger |first9=Angelika |date=2025-05 |title=Large language models for conducting systematic reviews: on the rise, but not yet ready for use—a scoping review |url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q134545593|journal=Journal of Clinical Epidemiology |language=en |volume=181 |pages=111746 |doi=10.1016/j.jclinepi.2025.111746}}</ref>.
The living review method relevant for just transition because it includes topic such as energy democracy which necessitate transdisciplinarity and consolidation of fragmented literature<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Droubi|first=Sufyan|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|last3=McCauley|first3=Darren|date=2022-04-01|title=A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137901182|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=86|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444}}</ref>.
=== Definitions of just transition : ===
* «a fair and equitable process of moving towards a post-carbon society’. »<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=McCauley|first=Darren|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|date=2018-08-01|title=Just transition: Integrating climate, energy and environmental justice|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q129947262|journal=Energy Policy|language=English|volume=119|pages=1–7|doi=10.1016/J.ENPOL.2018.04.014}}</ref>.
The concept of just transition originated from global trade unions in the 1980s to promote green jobs creation as a key element of sustainability transitions<ref name=":0" />. However, scholars have broadened the use of this term to develop frameworks for analysing issues of fairness in these transitions<ref name=":0" />. The concept of just transition can be used to bridge various bodies of scholarship : climate justice, environmental justiceand energy justice<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last=Wang|first=Xinxin|last2=Lo|first2=Kevin|date=2021-12-01|title=Just transition: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137209041|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=82|pages=102291|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102291}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite book|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q134545572|title=What is the “Just Transition”?|last=Heffron|first=Raphael J.|date=2021-01-01|pages=9–19|language=English}}</ref> and take into account various aspects of justice including distributional justice, procedural justice, restorative justice, recognition justice<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last=Jenkins|first=Kirsten|last2=McCauley|first2=Darren|last3=Heffron|first3=Raphael|last4=Stephan|first4=Hannes|last5=Rehner|first5=Robert|date=2016-01-01|title=Energy justice: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210566|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=11|pages=174–182|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004}}</ref>.
=== Definition of Procedural justice ===
Procedural justice is about the fairness of decision-making processes related to transitions<ref name=":4" /> such as the inclusion of those impacted by these decisions<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last=Stark|first=Anthony|last2=Gale|first2=Fred|last3=Murphy-Gregory|first3=Hannah|date=2023-05-05|title=Just Transitions’ Meanings: A Systematic Review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210229|journal=Society and Natural Resources|volume=36|issue=10|pages=1277–1297|doi=10.1080/08941920.2023.2207166}}</ref>. Procedural justice can include issues of community and citizen participation in decision making, their political representation their consultation or the integration of their knowledge, with a focus on neglected population (indigenous people, women, gender and ethnic minorities<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jenkins|first=Kirsten|last2=McCauley|first2=Darren|last3=Heffron|first3=Raphael|last4=Stephan|first4=Hannes|last5=Rehner|first5=Robert|date=2016-01-01|title=Energy justice: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210566|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=11|pages=174–182|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004}}</ref>. For example, the participation of affected communities in decisions related to the construction of new infrastructures<ref name=":0" />.
== Methodology ==
=== Wikidata and the semantic web ===<!-- Add introduction to what wikidata is and how the triplet works in a pedagogical manner
-->
=== Database search ===
We conducted preliminary searches in various databases including Web of science, Go Triple, Dimensions and OpenAlex. Web of Science was the database offering the most relevant restults and included the possibility to filter results to display only litterature reviews. Articles metadata were exported (in .ris format) and then imported into the reference manager software Zotero.
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Keywords search
!Database
!Search date
!Filters
!Number of results
|-
|(((TS=(procedural justice OR procedural fairness OR democracy OR participation OR participatory)) AND TS=(sustainability OR energy OR climate)) AND TS=(transition OR transitions)) AND TS=(review OR reviews)
|Web of Science (all databases, all dates)
|December 2025
|Document type: Review Article
|362
|}
=== Article screening ===
Articles abstract were then screened and we selected only articles which were litterature reviews focusing on concepts related to procedural justice as their main topics. We excluded article which were
* Not related to sustainability transition (e.g. sustainable shift in..., hard science papers...)
* Not literature reviews (e.g. review of policies, initiatives, cases, review notes, book review...)
* Not related to procedural justice but to participation into markets, participation in eco-friendly behaviors or included justice consideration only in “future research” suggestions
* Discussing participatory research methodologies (e.g. participatory modelling) without approaching it as an issue of justice, power or democracy
* Discussing procedural justice concepts as key variables or key results without it being the main focus of the paper
=== Importing selected articles into Wikidata ===
To import the selected articles meta-data into Wikidata, we first ran [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/aa9f59271fcb0807fb20c7d0110d26e4 a script] to check if any article was already present in the database. Next we used [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/90acdc3eac4109830db1b3ab855fcb24 another script] that checks the ISSN of the publication in Wikidata and add P-Q-pairs in the extra field of Zotero. Then we exported the articles data using the "export to Wikidata QuickStatements" function of Zotero and use the QuickStatements tool to add them to Wikidata.
Next we used the [[wikidata:Wikidata:Zotero/Cita|Cita]] (V1.0.0-beta.17) Zotero add-on to add articles QID in Zotero. At this point we identified that duplicates had been created in Wikidata (possibly because the initial [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/aa9f59271fcb0807fb20c7d0110d26e4 script] did not work that well because of the recent [[wikidata:Wikidata:SPARQL_query_service/WDQS_graph_split|Graph Split]] on Wikidata). We merged duplicates on wikidata using the [[wikidata:Help:Merge|"Merge" gadget]] on Wikidata. We checked manually for duplicated statments in those items.
=== Article classification through meta-data enrichement ===<!-- Add : What is meta-data enrichement -->
Existing review try to classify existing articles according to various criteria such as industry focus, academic discipline, geography of research sites (countries), stakeholder focus (community, consumer, worker...), type of study (case study, theory development) or methodology (quantitative, qualitative, mixt).<ref name=":5" /> We selected the most relevant properties in Wikidata to reflect these classifications : {{Wikidata entity link|P921}} to describe what the article is about, {{Wikidata entity link|P8363}} to describe its main methodology/research design and {{Wikidata entity link|P6153}} to describe its geographical focus.
==== Main subjects ====
We first read the articles abstracts and listed relevant topics and their Wikidata ID in a shared spreadsheet. These topics were :
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Qid
!Main topic
!Description
|-
|[[d:Q42377797|Q42377797]]
|acceptability
|characteristic of a thing being subject to acceptance for some purpose
|-
|[[d:Q2798912|Q2798912]]
|accountability
|concept of responsibility in ethics, governance and decision-making
|-
|[[d:Q421953|Q421953]]
|actor–network theory
|theory within social science
|-
|[[d:Q84459973|Q84459973]]
|affordability
|
|-
|[[d:Q185836|Q185836]]
|age of a person
|time elapsed since a person was born
|-
|[[d:Q4764988|Q4764988]]
|animal studies
|field in which animals are studied in a variety of cross-disciplinary ways
|-
|[[d:Q4338318|Q4338318]]
|awareness
|state or ability to perceive, to feel, or to be conscious of events, objects, or sensory patterns
|-
|[[d:Q4930066|Q4930066]]
|blue carbon
|carbon captured by the world's coastal ocean ecosystems
|-
|[[d:Q430460|Q430460]]
|capability approach
|economic theory
|-
|[[d:Q7569|Q7569]]
|child
|human between birth and puberty
|-
|[[d:Q4116870|Q4116870]]
|civic engagement
|individual or group activity addressing issues of public concern
|-
|[[d:Q125928|Q125928]]
|climate change
|human-caused changes to climate on Earth
|-
|[[d:Q260607|Q260607]]
|climate change
adaptation
|process of adjustment to actual or expected climate change and its effects, seeking to moderate or avoid harm or exploit beneficial opportunities
|-
|[[d:Q1291678|Q1291678]]
|climate justice
|term linking the climate crisis with environmental and social justice
|-
|[[d:Q2270945|Q2270945]]
|co-creation
|product or service design process in which input from consumers plays a central role
|-
|[[d:Q16972712|Q16972712]]
|co-design
|approach to design attempting to actively involve all stakeholders
|-
|[[d:Q16324410|Q16324410]]
|coproduction
|product or service design process in which input from consumers plays a central role
|-
|[[d:Q11024|Q11024]]
|communication
|act of conveying intended meaning
|-
|[[d:Q177634|Q177634]]
|community
|social unit of human organisms who share common values
|-
|[[d:Q5154673|Q5154673]]
|community choice aggregation
|alternative energy supply system
|-
|[[d:Q113514984|Q113514984]]
|community energy
|delivery of community-led renewable energy, energy demand reduction and energy supply projects
|-
|[[d:Q65807646|Q65807646]]
|community participation
|The taking part by members of a community in decisionmaking processes related to the development of their community
|-
|[[d:Q188843|Q188843]]
|cosmopolitanism
|ideology that all human beings belong to a single community, based on a shared morality
|-
|[[d:Q11693783|Q11693783]]
|decarbonization
|change of economy, especially of energy industries, towards lower carbon dioxide emissions
|-
|[[d:Q284289|Q284289]]
|deliberative democracy
|form of democracy focusing on consensus
|-
|[[d:Q7174|Q7174]]
|democracy
|form of government
|-
|[[d:Q552284|Q552284]]
|distributive justice
|concept of the socially just allocation of goods
|-
|[[d:Q1230584|Q1230584]]
|diversity
|concept in sociology and political studies
|-
|[[d:Q1049066|Q1049066]]
|ecological economics
|research field on the interdependence of human economies and natural ecosystems
|-
|[[d:Q8134|Q8134]]
|economics
|social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
|-
|[[d:Q868575|Q868575]]
|empowerment
|providing increased autonomy
|-
|[[d:Q295865|Q295865]]
|ecosystem service
|benefits created by nature, forests and environmental systems
|-
|[[d:Q138359220|Q138359220]]
|energy citizenship
|involvement of citizens in energy-related decisions
|-
|[https://www.wikidata.org/w/index.php?title=Q131444737&redirect=no Q131444737]
|community energy
|[redirection]
|-
|[[d:Q16869822|Q16869822]]
|energy consumption
|amount of energy or power used
|-
|[[d:Q1358789|Q1358789]]
|senior
|elderly person
|-
|[[d:Q14944319|Q14944319]]
|energy democracy
|concept in environmental justice movement
|-
|[[d:Q192704|Q192704]]
|energy efficiency
|ratio between the useful energy output and the input of a machine
|-
|[[d:Q24965464|Q24965464]]
|energy modeling
|process of building computer models of energy systems in order to analyze them
|-
|[[d:Q1805337|Q1805337]]
|energy policy
|policy addressing energy issues
|-
|[[d:Q1341244|Q1341244]]
|energy poverty
|lack of access to modern energy services
|-
|[[d:Q3406659|Q3406659]]
|energy production
|conversion of energy from a primary source into a form useful to humans
|-
|[[d:Q117091181|Q117091181]]
|energy justice
|subconcept of economic equality
|-
|[[d:Q3456219|Q3456219]]
|energy renovation
|building works aimed at reducing energy consumption and decarbonising the energy sources used
|-
|[[d:Q2700433|Q2700433]]
|energy security
|national security considerations of energy availability
|-
|[[d:Q837718|Q837718]]
|energy storage
|capture of energy produced at one time for use at a later time
|-
|[[d:Q795757|Q795757]]
|energy transition
|long-term structural change towards sustainable energy systems
|-
|[[d:Q1479527|Q1479527]]
|environmental justice
|system of fairness
|-
|[[d:Q771773|Q771773]]
|fairness
|concept in sociology and generally the interaction of society
|-
|[[d:Q56395513|Q56395513]]
|farming system
|method of agricultural production defined by its physical practices and economic characteristics
|-
|[[d:Q5465532|Q5465532]]
|food system
|all processes and infrastructure involved in feeding a population
|-
|[[d:Q4421|Q4421]]
|forest
|dense collection of trees covering a relatively large area
|-
|[[d:Q48277|Q48277]]
|gender
|social concept which distinguish the different gender categories
|-
|[[d:Q1553864|Q1553864]]
|governance
|all of the processes of governing, whether undertaken by a government, market or network, whether over a family, tribe, formal or informal organization or territory and whether through the laws, norms, power or language of an organized society
|-
|[[d:Q8458|Q8458]]
|human rights
|inalienable fundamental rights to which a person is inherently entitled
|-
|[[d:Q11376059|Q11376059]]
|human rights violation
|act or omission which contravene the principles of human rights
|-
|[[d:Q103817|Q103817]]
|indigenous people
|first inhabitants of an area and their descendants
|-
|[[d:Q113561794|Q113561794]]
|indigenous science
|indigenous knowledge applied to the scientific method
|-
|[[d:Q770480|Q770480]]
|injustice
|quality relating to unfairness or undeserved outcomes
|-
|[[d:Q17142211|Q17142211]]
|interactional justice
|the perceived appropriateness of interpersonal treatment
|-
|[[d:Q1516555|Q1516555]]
|intersectionnality
|theoretical framework of multidimensional oppression
|-
|[[d:Q6316391|Q6316391]]
|just transition
|Framework developed by the trade union movement to encompass wide range of social interventions needed to secure decent work opportunities and a greener economy.
|-
|[[d:Q366139|Q366139]]
|legitimation
|the process of making something acceptable and normative to a group
|-
|[[d:Q3027857|Q3027857]]
|living lab
|user-centered, open innovation ecosystem integrating research and innovation in real life communities
|-
|[[d:Q59679511|Q59679511]]
|low income
|home with little money
|-
|[[d:Q43619|Q43619]]
|natural environment
|all living and non-living things occurring naturally on Earth or some region thereof
|-
|[[d:Q127514833|Q127514833]]
|nature-positive
|global goal to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030
|-
|[[d:Q13023682|Q13023682]]
|non-human
|organism not in the genus Homo
|-
|[[d:Q728646|Q728646]]
|partnership
|arrangement in which parties agree to cooperate to advance their mutual interests
|-
|[[d:Q3907287|Q3907287]]
|policy making
|the act of developing policy
|-
|[[d:Q9357091|Q9357091]]
|political theory
|class of theory
|-
|[[d:Q265425|Q265425]]
|postcolonialism
|academic discipline
|-
|[[d:Q25107|Q25107]]
|power
|ability to influence the behavior of others
|-
|[[d:Q442100|Q442100]]
|procedural justice
|fairness in the processes that resolve disputes and allocate resources
|-
|[[d:Q7249406|Q7249406]]
|project governance
|management framework
|-
|[[d:Q7257735|Q7257735]]
|public engagement
|Policy-making practice
|-
|[[d:Q541936|Q541936]]
|public participation
|participation of citizens in various policy decisions and planning processes
|-
|[[d:Q6142016|Q6142016]]
|recognition justice
|social philosophy theory
|-
|[[d:Q10509953|Q10509953]]
|renewable electricity
|electricity from renweable sources
|-
|[[d:Q12705|Q12705]]
|renewable energy
|energy collected from renewable resources
|-
|[[d:Q56510941|Q56510941]]
|renewable energy policy
|
|-
|[[d:Q1165392|Q1165392]]
|restorative justice
|approach to justice where victims and perpetrators mediate a restitution agreement
|-
|[[d:Q4414036|Q4414036]]
|rural population
|inhabitants of rural areas or of small towns classified as rural
|-
|[[d:Q17152351|Q17152351]]
|smart system
|adaptive intelligent systems
|-
|[[d:Q187588|Q187588]]
|social class
|group of people categorized in a hierarchy based on socioeconomic factors
|-
|[[d:Q264892|Q264892]]
|social justice
|concept that discrimination recognized in society should be remedied
|-
|[[d:Q34749|Q34749]]
|social science
|academic disciplines concerned with society and the relationships between individuals in society
|-
|[[d:Q2930198|Q2930198]]
|stakeholder participation
|involvement of groups or individuals affected by the actions of an entity
|-
|[[d:Q125359881|Q125359881]]
|sustainability transition
|
|-
|[[d:Q219416|Q219416]]
|sustainability
|ability of human civilization to coexist with the biosphere in a steady state
|-
|[[d:Q131201|Q131201]]
|sustainable development
|mode of human development that meets current demands without compromising the needs of future generations
|-
|[[d:Q7649586|Q7649586]]
|Sustainable Development Goals
|set of United Nations-defined global development goals and climate change
|-
|[[d:Q69883|Q69883]]
|urban planning
|technical and political process concerned with the use of land and design of the urban environment
|-
|[[d:Q920600|Q920600]]
|urban renewal
|program of land redevelopment in cities, often where there is urban decay
|-
|[[d:Q3376054|Q3376054]]
|vulnerable population
|group of persons whose range of options is severely limited, are subjected to coercion, or who may be compromised in their ability to give informed consent
|-
|[[d:Q107389921|Q107389921]]
|water-management
|
|-
|[[d:Q7981051|Q7981051]]
|well-being
|measure of how well life is to someone or a group with factors such as health, happiness and satisfaction
|-
|[[d:Q467|Q467]]
|woman
|female adult human
|-
|[[d:Q188867|Q188867]]
|future studies
|study of possible, probable, and preferable social, technological and political futures
|-
|[[d:Q1038171|Q1038171]]
|participatory design
|active involvement of all stakeholders in the design process
|}
<!-- include all below items using the wikidata link template
-->
Then, for each article, we inferred what the {{Wikidata entity link|P921}} was from the abstracts and author provided keywords.
==== Study types ====
Our review included only litterature reviews. We first read abstracts to identify all the [https://angryloki.github.io/wikidata-graph-builder/?item=Q2412849&property=P279&mode=reverse different types of litterature reviews] present in the corpus and created wikidata items which did not exist, for example {{Wikidata entity link|Q137209848}} and {{Wikidata entity link|Q137174203}}. We improved these method items using the methodological references cited in the reviewed papers. The types of reviews were :
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Qid
!Study type
!Description
|-
|[[d:Q603441|Q603441]]
|bibliometrics
|statistical analysis of written publications, such as books or articles
|-
|[[d:Q472342|Q472342]]
|scientometrics
|study of measuring and analysing science, technology and innovation
|-
|[[d:Q815382|Q815382]]
|meta-analysis
|statistical method that summarizes data from multiple sources
|-
|[[d:Q1504425|Q1504425]]
|systematic review
|publication type, study that gathers, analyzes, and communicates the results of research and information on a topic
|-
|[[d:Q2412849|Q2412849]]
|literature review
|process of information search and text of a review article (Q7318358), which includes the current knowledge including substantive findings, as well as theoretical and methodological contributions to a particular topic
|-
|[[d:Q6822263|Q6822263]]
|meta-regression
|statistical tool used in meta-analyses
|-
|[[d:Q7301211|Q7301211]]
|realist evaluation
|[...]
|-
|[[d:Q17007303|Q17007303]]
|combinatorial meta-analysis
|[...]
|-
|[[d:Q70470634|Q70470634]]
|network meta-analysis
|meta-analysis of randomized trials in which estimates of comparative treatment effects are visualized and interpreted from a network of interventions
|-
|[[d:Q101116078|Q101116078]]
|scoping review
|search for concepts by mapping the language and data which surrounds those concepts and adjusting the search method iteratively to synthesize evidence and assess the scope of an area of inquiry
|-
|[[d:Q110665014|Q110665014]]
|narrative review
|type of literature review, without structured method of retrieval and analysis
|-
|[[d:Q137174203|Q137174203]]
|conceptual review
|academic research aiming to review existing concepts and definitions in the litterature
|-
|[[d:Q137174450|Q137174450]]
|critical review
|type of literature review analysing strenghts, major contributions, mistakes and neglected issues in an academic field of research
|-
|[[d:Q137209848|Q137209848]]
|integrative literature review
|type of literature review
|-
|[[d:Q110665014|Q137211242]]
|narrative review
|type of literature review, without structured method of retrieval and analysis
|}<!-- include all below items using the wikidata link template
-->
[Include list and description of types of litterature reviews]
Then, we added the {{Wikidata entity link|P8363}} of each articles based on the abstract and method sections. In case of doubt, we compared our interpretation.
==== Research site ====
When an article had a specific geographical focus, we used the property {{Wikidata entity link|P6153}} to describe it. For example, the article "{{Wikidata entity link|Q137901202}}" focused on {{Wikidata entity link|Q132959}}.
==== Results ====
[insert table about the sample]
=== Knowledge modelling ===
Concept maps can be a powerful literature review tool<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Lewis|first=John Kennedy|date=2016|title=Using ATLAS.ti to Facilitate Data Analysis for a Systematic Review of Leadership Competencies in the Completion of a Doctoral Dissertation|url=https://www.ssrn.com/abstract=2850726|journal=SSRN Electronic Journal|language=en|doi=10.2139/ssrn.2850726|issn=1556-5068}}</ref> allowing to synthetize theoretical statements about relationship between concepts<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Panniers|first=Teresa L|last2=Feuerbach|first2=Renee Daiuta|last3=Soeken|first3=Karen L|date=2003-08-01|title=Methods in informatics: using data derived from a systematic review of health care texts to develop a concept map for use in the neonatal intensive care setting|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1532046403000911|journal=Journal of Biomedical Informatics|series=Building Nursing Knowledge through Informatics: From Concept Representation to Data Mining|volume=36|issue=4|pages=232–239|doi=10.1016/j.jbi.2003.09.010|issn=1532-0464}}</ref>. In the present study, we explored how concept map can be used to model the knowledge present in the paper we selected.
[define knowledge modelling]
==== Conceptual modelling ====
We first reflected on what kind of wikidata properties could be used to represent concepts and theories in wikidata. Capturing the content of a concept is not straightforward and there are various approaches coming from psychology and philosophy on the matter<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Origin of Concepts|last=Carey|first=Susan|date=2011|publisher=Oxford University Press USA - OSO|isbn=978-0-19-536763-8|series=Oxford Series in Cognitive Development Ser|location=Cary}}</ref> we summarize these approaches below and examine which wikidata properties exist to represent them.
* Definition: the content of a concept can be formed by its decomposition into other concepts. Many Wikidata properties can be relevant to model definitions, for example: {{Wikidata entity link|P1269}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P361}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P527}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P2670}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P1552}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P6477}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}}...
* Categorization: the content of a concept is formed by its illustration by an exemplar (a [[wikipedia:Prototype_theory|prototype]]) that best represent the concept. Apart from the inclusion of images to illustrate an item, Wikidata structure do not highlight exemplars. However, properties signifying relations of categorizations are among the most used with {{Wikidata entity link|P31}} and {{Wikidata entity link|P279}}.
* Theory: the content of a concept is formed by its role in providing explanation of the world. Wikidata includes several properties to describe causal relationships: {{Wikidata entity link|P828}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P1542}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P1537}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P1479}}.
* Essence: the content of a concept is "something" deep explaning the entity's existence and its properties. We can use concepts before knowing what they mean, and this is what allows us to revise our knowledge about it. The idea of essence is well represented by the QID of Wikidata entities: it is independent of language and definitions and we can create it before really knowing what all its properties will be.
* Origin: the content of the concept is determined causally by social and historial factors (e.g. someone inventing the concept and introducing its use in a language community). This can be represented by the property {{Wikidata entity link|P3938}}.
==== Thematic networks ====
[[File:Thematic network example.jpg|thumb|547x547px|Structure of a thematic network (Source: Attride-Stirling 2001)]]
A thematic network is “simply a way of organizing a thematic analysis of qualitative data”<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|last=Attride-Stirling|first=Jennifer|date=2001-12|title=Thematic networks: an analytic tool for qualitative research|url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/146879410100100307|journal=Qualitative Research|language=en|volume=1|issue=3|pages=385–405|doi=10.1177/146879410100100307|issn=1468-7941}}</ref>. It is compatible with classical coding strategies such as [[grounded theory]]<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Corbin|first=Juliet|last2=Strauss|first2=Anselm|date=1990-12-01|title=Grounded Theory Research: Procedures, Canons and Evaluative Criteria|url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/zfsoz-1990-0602/html|journal=Zeitschrift für Soziologie|language=en|volume=19|issue=6|pages=418–427|doi=10.1515/zfsoz-1990-0602|issn=2366-0325}}</ref>. Thematic networks can be used to visualise the data structure after identifying themes and help structure and interpret the data<ref name=":7" />. The principle is to assemble basic themes into more general themes.
Qualitative researchers usually use {{Wikidata entity link|Q4550939}} and qualitative coding (e.g. grounded theory) to identify themes and sub-themes.
However, the nature of the relationship between these various themes and sub-themes is often not specified.
*
==== Causal networks ====
The use of diagrams to represent causal relationship exist in various research practices. In statistics, researchers sometime present models with boxes and arrows representing correlations and/or causations<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://mirror.vcu.edu/pub/mx/doc/mxmang10.pdf|title=Statistical Modeling|last=Neale|first=Michael C.|last2=Boker|first2=Steven M.|last3=Xie|first3=Gary|last4=Maes|first4=Hermine H.|publisher=Richmond, VA: Department of Psychiatry|year=1999|location=Virginia Commonwealth University}}</ref>. In qualitative research, building grounded theory models is about "[accounting] for not only all the major emergent concepts, themes, and dimensions, but also for their dynamic interrelationships. Speaking in classic boxes-and-arrows terms, this process amounts to assembling the constellation of boxes with a special focus on the arrows."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Gioia|first=Dennis A.|last2=Corley|first2=Kevin G.|last3=Hamilton|first3=Aimee L.|date=2013-01|title=Seeking Qualitative Rigor in Inductive Research: Notes on the Gioia Methodology|url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1094428112452151|journal=Organizational Research Methods|language=en|volume=16|issue=1|pages=15–31|doi=10.1177/1094428112452151|issn=1094-4281}}</ref> Researchers relying on system theory also use causal loop diagram where boxes represent variables and arrows represent causal influence (positive or negative), causal relationship can "feedback" (two variables can influence each other)<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-031-01919-7_4|title=Causal Loop Diagrams|last=Barbrook-Johnson|first=Pete|last2=Penn|first2=Alexandra S.|date=2022|publisher=Springer International Publishing|isbn=978-3-031-01833-6|location=Cham|pages=47–59|language=en|doi=10.1007/978-3-031-01919-7_4}}</ref>.
Wikidata includes several properties to describe causal relationships:
* {{Wikidata entity link|P828}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1542}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1537}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1479}} : it is difficult to identify single causes for social phenomenons, many factors having an effect on the subject item will likely be contributing factors
==== Modelling concepts ====
To model concepts related to just transition. We read the selected papers and used them as source to build a knowledge graph in wikidata. For example, the paper {{Wikidata entity link|Q137901182}} mention "Energy democracy is both an ideal and a process"<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Droubi|first=Sufyan|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|last3=McCauley|first3=Darren|date=2022-04-01|title=A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137901182|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=86|pages=4|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444}}</ref>, we thus entered the wikidata statement {{Wikidata entity link|Q14944319}} is an {{Wikidata entity link|P31}} {{Wikidata entity link|Q840396}}, using the paper as source.
Challenges :
*{{Wikidata entity link|P31}}: concepts have a dual nature because they designate at the same time an idea and the entity that this idea represent.
* {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}}: concepts do not have goals in themselves, but the reality they represent can have goals
* wikidata current items are not really suited to model "meta-research" statements. For example, modelling the idea tha the literature on energy democracy is fragmented would require creating an item representing the energy democracy literature, not just energy democracy in general. Similarly, it can be difficult to model the chronological evolution of the definition of an idea (although it could be technically possible).
* To distinguish the causes of the concepts/discourses and the causes of the phenomenon itself, we used {{Wikidata entity link|P3938}} to indicate the origins of the concept or the movements promoting it.
* To distinguish goals from the process to reach it, we used {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}} to describe ideals and {{Wikidata entity link|P2670}} to describe processes.
* Wikidata does not seem to be the best tool to model quantitative statements, for example, the paper {{Wikidata entity link|Q137901196}} states that "9.8% of the final energy consumed in developing countries comes from modern renewable energy sources". Including energy data in Wikidata require using or creating specific properties (e.g. {{Wikidata entity link|P6826}})
* It is hard to represent in Wikidata affirmations related to missing knowlege, propositions of untested hypothesis, critique of existing research or research agenda recommandations
* When concepts are not precisely defined, statements cannot be modelled correctly. For example, in the sentence "management of social affairs by voluntary and self-governing associations is deemed to ensure that both citizen choice and public welfare are best served"<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Veelen|first=Bregje van|last2=Horst|first2=Dan van der|date=2018-12-01|title=What is energy democracy? Connecting social science energy research and political theory|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q129652515|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|language=English|volume=46|pages=19–28|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010}}</ref>, "choice" could refer to {{Wikidata entity link|Q111986453}}, {{Wikidata entity link|Q1331926}}, or {{Wikidata entity link|Q12888920}} as "choice" can refer to the availability of different options, or the decision process to chose among them.
Advantages :
* Link toward unique identifiers for concepts, but also laws (e.g. {{Wikidata entity link|Q139764294}})
=== Writing ===
To cite articles we used the [[Template:Cite Q|Cite Q template.]] Each reference is an item in Wikidata and the template retrieve the necessary data to generate the citation references below.
== Data ==
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! QID !! Year !! DOI !! Title
|-
| [[d:Q137901191|Q137901191]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1002/GEO2.70040 10.1002/GEO2.70040] || Place-Based Sustainability Transformations for Just Futures: A Systematic Review
|-
| [[d:Q137901187|Q137901187]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1002/WCC.932 10.1002/WCC.932] || Public Communication of Climate and Justice: A Scoping Review
|-
| [[d:Q135979013|Q135979013]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S13280-025-02202-Z 10.1007/S13280-025-02202-Z] || Participatory approaches to climate adaptation, resilience, and mitigation: A systematic review
|-
| [[d:Q137901223|Q137901223]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S13412-021-00726-W 10.1007/S13412-021-00726-W] || A review of stakeholder participation studies in renewable electricity and water: does the resource context matter?
|-
| [[d:Q137901184|Q137901184]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S40518-021-00184-6 10.1007/S40518-021-00184-6] || Energy Storage as an Equity Asset.
|-
| [[d:Q114204627|Q114204627]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S43621-021-00024-Z 10.1007/S43621-021-00024-Z] || Can public awareness, knowledge and engagement improve climate change adaptation policies?
|-
| [[d:Q137901209|Q137901209]] || 2026 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.AGSY.2025.104512 10.1016/J.AGSY.2025.104512] || Designing with non-humans for agricultural systems transformation: An interdisciplinary review and framework for reflection
|-
| [[d:Q137901201|Q137901201]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.COPSYC.2024.101987 10.1016/J.COPSYC.2024.101987] || Individual and community catalysts for Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) development
|-
| [[d:Q114197507|Q114197507]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.CRM.2022.100438 10.1016/J.CRM.2022.100438] || Advancements of sustainable development goals in co-production for climate change adaptation research
|-
| [[d:Q129203992|Q129203992]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.EGYR.2024.01.040 10.1016/J.EGYR.2024.01.040] || Empowering energy citizenship: Exploring dimensions and drivers in citizen engagement during the energy transition
|-
| [[d:Q137901216|Q137901216]] || 2026 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.EIAR.2025.108187 10.1016/J.EIAR.2025.108187] || From participation to partnership: A systematic review of public engagement in sustainable urban planning
|-
| [[d:Q137210566|Q137210566]] || 2016 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004 10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004] || Energy justice: A conceptual review
|-
| [[d:Q115448818|Q115448818]] || 2016 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2016.04.001 10.1016/J.ERSS.2016.04.001] || Stakeholder involvement in sustainability science—A critical view
|-
| [[d:Q129652515|Q129652515]] || 2018 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010 10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010] || What is energy democracy? Connecting social science energy research and political theory
|-
| [[d:Q137901196|Q137901196]] || 2020 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101716 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101716] || Of renewable energy, energy democracy, and sustainable development: A roadmap to accelerate the energy transition in developing countries
|-
| [[d:Q136447761|Q136447761]] || 2020 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101768 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101768] || Energy democracy as a process, an outcome and a goal: A conceptual review
|-
| [[d:Q137901204|Q137901204]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101834 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101834] || Identities, innovation, and governance: A systematic review of co-creation in wind energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901183|Q137901183]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101837 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101837] || Renewable energy for whom? A global systematic review of the environmental justice implications of renewable energy technologies
|-
| [[d:Q137901207|Q137901207]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101871 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101871] || Rethinking community empowerment in the energy transformation: A critical review of the definitions, drivers and outcomes
|-
| [[d:Q137901215|Q137901215]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101876 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101876] || Co-production in the wind energy sector: A systematic literature review of public engagement beyond invited stakeholder participation
|-
| [[d:Q114306511|Q114306511]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101907 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101907] || From consultation toward co-production in science and policy: A critical systematic review of participatory climate and energy initiatives
|-
| [[d:Q137901221|Q137901221]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102257 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102257] || The challenges of engaging island communities: Lessons on renewable energy from a review of 17 case studies
|-
| [[d:Q137901218|Q137901218]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102333 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102333] || The (in)justices of smart local energy systems: A systematic review, integrated framework, and future research agenda
|-
| [[d:Q137901182|Q137901182]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444] || A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?
|-
| [[d:Q114306483|Q114306483]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102482 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102482] || The role of energy democracy and energy citizenship for participatory energy transitions: A comprehensive review
|-
| [[d:Q114306476|Q114306476]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102714 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102714] || What about citizens? A literature review of citizen engagement in sustainability transitions research
|-
| [[d:Q137901193|Q137901193]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102862 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102862] || When energy justice is contested: A systematic review of a decade of research on Sweden?s conflicted energy landscape
|-
| [[d:Q137901219|Q137901219]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102913 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102913] || Can we optimise for justice? Reviewing the inclusion of energy justice in energy system optimisation models
|-
| [[d:Q137901186|Q137901186]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103010 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103010] || Analysing intersections of justice with energy transitions in India- A systematic literature review
|-
| [[d:Q137901181|Q137901181]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103053 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103053] || Fostering justice through engagement: A literature review of public engagement in energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137211155|Q137211155]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103213 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103213] || A fairway to fairness: Toward a richer conceptualization of fairness perceptions for just energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901217|Q137901217]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103221 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103221] || Powering just energy transitions: A review of the justice implications of community choice aggregation
|-
| [[d:Q137901199|Q137901199]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104016 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104016] || Making energy renovations equitable: A literature review of decision-making criteria for a just energy transition in residential buildings
|-
| [[d:Q137901188|Q137901188]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104036 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104036] || Community energy justice: A review of origins, convergence, and a research agenda
|-
| [[d:Q137901211|Q137901211]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104067 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104067] || Psychological and social factors driving citizen involvement in renewable energy communities: A systematic review
|-
| [[d:Q137901192|Q137901192]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104149 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104149] || Assessing social impacts and Energy Justice along green hydrogen supply chains: a capability-based framework
|-
| [[d:Q137901195|Q137901195]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104422 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104422] || Out of place, scale and time? Navigating injustices across mission arenas of the German Energiewende
|-
| [[d:Q137901185|Q137901185]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ESD.2024.101546 10.1016/J.ESD.2024.101546] || Characterizing 'injustices' in clean energy transitions in Africa
|-
| [[d:Q137901226|Q137901226]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JCLEPRO.2024.143470 10.1016/J.JCLEPRO.2024.143470] || Energy justice and sustainable urban renewal: A systematic review of low-income old town communities
|-
| [[d:Q137901222|Q137901222]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JENVMAN.2024.120804 10.1016/J.JENVMAN.2024.120804] || Forest, climate, and policy literature lacks acknowledgement of environmental justice, diversity, equity, and inclusion
|-
| [[d:Q115441381|Q115441381]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.RSER.2021.111504 10.1016/J.RSER.2021.111504] || Participatory methods in energy system modelling and planning – A review
|-
| [[d:Q137901205|Q137901205]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.RSER.2025.115892 10.1016/J.RSER.2025.115892] || A systematic review of the intersection between energy justice and human rights
|-
| [[d:Q137901225|Q137901225]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1017/SUS.2024.24 10.1017/SUS.2024.24] || Blue carbon as just transition? A structured literature review
|-
| [[d:Q137901220|Q137901220]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1017/SUS.2025.2 10.1017/SUS.2025.2] || Toward an intersectional equity approach in social-ecological transformations
|-
| [[d:Q137901203|Q137901203]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2023.2256697 10.1080/14693062.2023.2256697] || Exploring the democracy-climate nexus: a review of correlations between democracy and climate policy performance
|-
| [[d:Q137901164|Q137901164]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1111/GEC3.12662 10.1111/GEC3.12662] || Creating fairer futures for sustainability transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901227|Q137901227]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1139/ER-2024-0018 10.1139/ER-2024-0018] || Community engagement in nature-positive food systems programming and research in East and Southern Africa: a review
|-
| [[d:Q119955266|Q119955266]] || 2019 || [https://doi.org/10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-101718-033103 10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-101718-033103] || Co-Producing Sustainability: Reordering the Governance of Science, Policy, and Practice
|-
| [[d:Q137901206|Q137901206]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-112621-063400 10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-112621-063400] || Metrics for Decision-Making in Energy Justice
|-
| [[d:Q137901213|Q137901213]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1186/S13705-021-00330-4 10.1186/S13705-021-00330-4] || Mapping emergent public engagement in societal transitions: a scoping review
|-
| [[d:Q137901163|Q137901163]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.17573/CEPAR.2025.2.09 10.17573/CEPAR.2025.2.09] || From Co-Creation to Circular Cities: Exploring Living Labs in EU Governance Frameworks - A Literature Review
|-
| [[d:Q137901197|Q137901197]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/EN17143512 10.3390/EN17143512] || A Systematic Review on the Path to Inclusive and Sustainable Energy Transitions
|-
| [[d:Q104887325|Q104887325]] || 2019 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU11041023 10.3390/SU11041023] || Deliberation and the Promise of a Deeply Democratic Sustainability Transition
|-
| [[d:Q137901202|Q137901202]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU13042128 10.3390/SU13042128] || A Review of Energy Communities in Sub-Saharan Africa as a Transition Pathway to Energy Democracy
|-
| [[d:Q137901210|Q137901210]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU15032441 10.3390/SU15032441] || Sustainable Project Governance: Scientometric Analysis and Emerging Trends
|-
| [[d:Q137901224|Q137901224]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU16198700 10.3390/SU16198700] || Empowering Communities to Act for a Change: A Review of the Community Empowerment Programs towards Sustainability and Resilience
|}
== References ==
{{References}}
8niuo2gbkx5nc8vt3dg5ddtb9zjm3bn
2808907
2808872
2026-05-13T14:33:32Z
Jeanne Noiraud
1366702
/* Modelling concepts */
2808907
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Introduction ==
=== Definition of living review ===
The concept of living systematic reviews is recent (2014), so the definition has been regularly reworked<ref name="Why1">{{Cite Q |Q40040379 }}</ref>. Living systematic reviews complement the older concept of [[literature review]]. Its objective is the same : obtain an accurate overview of the state of scientific knowledge on a subject<ref name="Why1" /><ref name="Why4">{{Cite journal |last=Akl |first=Elie A. |last2=Meerpohl |first2=Joerg J. |last3=Elliott |first3=Julian |last4=Kahale |first4=Lara A. |last5=Schünemann |first5=Holger J. |last6=Agoritsas |first6=Thomas |last7=Hilton |first7=John |last8=Perron |first8=Caroline |last9=Akl |first9=Elie |last10=Hodder |first10=Rebecca |last11=Pestridge |first11=Charlotte |last12=Albrecht |first12=Lauren |last13=Horsley |first13=Tanya |last14=Platt |first14=Joanne |last15=Armstrong |first15=Rebecca |date=2017-11 |title=Living systematic reviews: 4. Living guideline recommendations |url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q50084143 |journal=Journal of Clinical Epidemiology |language=en |volume=91 |pages=47–53 |doi=10.1016/j.jclinepi.2017.08.009}}</ref><ref name=":6">{{Citation|title=Living Systematic Reviews|url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-1566-9_7|publisher=Springer US|work=Meta-Research: Methods and Protocols|date=2022|access-date=2026-01-16|place=New York, NY|isbn=978-1-0716-1566-9|pages=121–134|doi=10.1007/978-1-0716-1566-9_7|language=en|first=Mark|last=Simmonds|first2=Julian H.|last2=Elliott|first3=Anneliese|last3=Synnot|first4=Tari|last4=Turner|editor-first=Evangelos|editor-last=Evangelou|editor2-first=Areti Angeliki|editor2-last=Veroniki}}</ref>. A traditional review may be obsolete by the time it is published, as new studies have emerged between the submission of the manuscript and its publication<ref name="Why1"/><ref name="Why4" /><ref name=":6" />. Living systematic reviews exists to address this common problem<ref name="Why1" /><ref name="Why4" /><ref name=":6" /><ref name=":2">https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2019/05/14/the-death-of-the-literature-review-and-the-rise-of-the-dynamic-knowledge-map/</ref>. It is therefore particularly useful in rapidly evolving fields of research<ref name="Why1" /><ref name=":6" />, such as just transition.
[[wikidata:Q33002955|Knowledge graphs]], a structured representation of knowledge in the form of a graph, linked together by relationships that encode explicit meanings between these entities, are very suitable for conducting living systematic reviews<ref name=":2" /><ref name="Fotopoulou">{{Cite journal|first1=Eleni |last1=Fotopoulou|first2=Ioanna|last2=Mandilara|first3=Anastasios|last3=Zafeiropoulos|first4=Chrysi|last4=Laspidou|first5=Giannis |last5=Adamos|first6=Phoebe|last6=Koundouri|first7=Symeon|last7=Papavassiliou|title=SustainGraph: A knowledge graph for tracking the progress and the interlinking among the sustainable development goals’ targets|journal=Frontiers in environmental science, Frontiers|volume=10|date=2022-10-26|issn=2296-665X|doi=10.3389/FENVS.2022.1003599|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q117837999}}.</ref>. Advances in AI could render certain older methodological types of living systematic reviews obsoletes<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Krlev|first=Gorgi|last2=Hannigan|first2=Tim|last3=Spicer|first3=André|date=2025-01|title=What Makes a Good Review Article? Empirical Evidence From Management and Organization Research|url=https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/annals.2021.0051|journal=Academy of Management Annals|volume=19|issue=1|pages=376–403|doi=10.5465/annals.2021.0051|issn=1941-6520}}</ref>, as IA are useful to extract, filter and classify datas<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.20276v1|title=Enhancing Systematic Reviews with Large Language Models: Using GPT-4 and Kimi|last=Kaptur|first=Dandan Chen|last2=Huang|first2=Yue|date=2025-04-28|website=arXiv.org|language=en|doi=10.48550/arXiv.2504.20276|access-date=2026-01-21|last3=Ji|first3=Xuejun Ryan|last4=Guo|first4=Yanhui|last5=Kaptur|first5=Bradley}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.20276v1|title=Enhancing Systematic Reviews with Large Language Models: Using GPT-4 and Kimi|last=Kaptur|first=Dandan Chen|last2=Huang|first2=Yue|date=2025-04-28|website=arXiv.org|language=en|doi=10.48550/arXiv.2504.20276|access-date=2026-01-21|last3=Ji|first3=Xuejun Ryan|last4=Guo|first4=Yanhui|last5=Kaptur|first5=Bradley}}</ref>. [[Large language models]] (LLM) are "on the rise" (2025), but "not yet ready for use"<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lieberum |first=Judith-Lisa |last2=Toews |first2=Markus |last3=Metzendorf |first3=Maria-Inti |last4=Heilmeyer |first4=Felix |last5=Siemens |first5=Waldemar |last6=Haverkamp |first6=Christian |last7=Böhringer |first7=Daniel |last8=Meerpohl |first8=Joerg J. |last9=Eisele-Metzger |first9=Angelika |date=2025-05 |title=Large language models for conducting systematic reviews: on the rise, but not yet ready for use—a scoping review |url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q134545593|journal=Journal of Clinical Epidemiology |language=en |volume=181 |pages=111746 |doi=10.1016/j.jclinepi.2025.111746}}</ref>.
The living review method relevant for just transition because it includes topic such as energy democracy which necessitate transdisciplinarity and consolidation of fragmented literature<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Droubi|first=Sufyan|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|last3=McCauley|first3=Darren|date=2022-04-01|title=A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137901182|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=86|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444}}</ref>.
=== Definitions of just transition : ===
* «a fair and equitable process of moving towards a post-carbon society’. »<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=McCauley|first=Darren|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|date=2018-08-01|title=Just transition: Integrating climate, energy and environmental justice|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q129947262|journal=Energy Policy|language=English|volume=119|pages=1–7|doi=10.1016/J.ENPOL.2018.04.014}}</ref>.
The concept of just transition originated from global trade unions in the 1980s to promote green jobs creation as a key element of sustainability transitions<ref name=":0" />. However, scholars have broadened the use of this term to develop frameworks for analysing issues of fairness in these transitions<ref name=":0" />. The concept of just transition can be used to bridge various bodies of scholarship : climate justice, environmental justiceand energy justice<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last=Wang|first=Xinxin|last2=Lo|first2=Kevin|date=2021-12-01|title=Just transition: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137209041|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=82|pages=102291|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102291}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite book|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q134545572|title=What is the “Just Transition”?|last=Heffron|first=Raphael J.|date=2021-01-01|pages=9–19|language=English}}</ref> and take into account various aspects of justice including distributional justice, procedural justice, restorative justice, recognition justice<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last=Jenkins|first=Kirsten|last2=McCauley|first2=Darren|last3=Heffron|first3=Raphael|last4=Stephan|first4=Hannes|last5=Rehner|first5=Robert|date=2016-01-01|title=Energy justice: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210566|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=11|pages=174–182|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004}}</ref>.
=== Definition of Procedural justice ===
Procedural justice is about the fairness of decision-making processes related to transitions<ref name=":4" /> such as the inclusion of those impacted by these decisions<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last=Stark|first=Anthony|last2=Gale|first2=Fred|last3=Murphy-Gregory|first3=Hannah|date=2023-05-05|title=Just Transitions’ Meanings: A Systematic Review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210229|journal=Society and Natural Resources|volume=36|issue=10|pages=1277–1297|doi=10.1080/08941920.2023.2207166}}</ref>. Procedural justice can include issues of community and citizen participation in decision making, their political representation their consultation or the integration of their knowledge, with a focus on neglected population (indigenous people, women, gender and ethnic minorities<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jenkins|first=Kirsten|last2=McCauley|first2=Darren|last3=Heffron|first3=Raphael|last4=Stephan|first4=Hannes|last5=Rehner|first5=Robert|date=2016-01-01|title=Energy justice: A conceptual review|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137210566|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=11|pages=174–182|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004}}</ref>. For example, the participation of affected communities in decisions related to the construction of new infrastructures<ref name=":0" />.
== Methodology ==
=== Wikidata and the semantic web ===<!-- Add introduction to what wikidata is and how the triplet works in a pedagogical manner
-->
=== Database search ===
We conducted preliminary searches in various databases including Web of science, Go Triple, Dimensions and OpenAlex. Web of Science was the database offering the most relevant restults and included the possibility to filter results to display only litterature reviews. Articles metadata were exported (in .ris format) and then imported into the reference manager software Zotero.
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Keywords search
!Database
!Search date
!Filters
!Number of results
|-
|(((TS=(procedural justice OR procedural fairness OR democracy OR participation OR participatory)) AND TS=(sustainability OR energy OR climate)) AND TS=(transition OR transitions)) AND TS=(review OR reviews)
|Web of Science (all databases, all dates)
|December 2025
|Document type: Review Article
|362
|}
=== Article screening ===
Articles abstract were then screened and we selected only articles which were litterature reviews focusing on concepts related to procedural justice as their main topics. We excluded article which were
* Not related to sustainability transition (e.g. sustainable shift in..., hard science papers...)
* Not literature reviews (e.g. review of policies, initiatives, cases, review notes, book review...)
* Not related to procedural justice but to participation into markets, participation in eco-friendly behaviors or included justice consideration only in “future research” suggestions
* Discussing participatory research methodologies (e.g. participatory modelling) without approaching it as an issue of justice, power or democracy
* Discussing procedural justice concepts as key variables or key results without it being the main focus of the paper
=== Importing selected articles into Wikidata ===
To import the selected articles meta-data into Wikidata, we first ran [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/aa9f59271fcb0807fb20c7d0110d26e4 a script] to check if any article was already present in the database. Next we used [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/90acdc3eac4109830db1b3ab855fcb24 another script] that checks the ISSN of the publication in Wikidata and add P-Q-pairs in the extra field of Zotero. Then we exported the articles data using the "export to Wikidata QuickStatements" function of Zotero and use the QuickStatements tool to add them to Wikidata.
Next we used the [[wikidata:Wikidata:Zotero/Cita|Cita]] (V1.0.0-beta.17) Zotero add-on to add articles QID in Zotero. At this point we identified that duplicates had been created in Wikidata (possibly because the initial [https://gist.github.com/zuphilip/aa9f59271fcb0807fb20c7d0110d26e4 script] did not work that well because of the recent [[wikidata:Wikidata:SPARQL_query_service/WDQS_graph_split|Graph Split]] on Wikidata). We merged duplicates on wikidata using the [[wikidata:Help:Merge|"Merge" gadget]] on Wikidata. We checked manually for duplicated statments in those items.
=== Article classification through meta-data enrichement ===<!-- Add : What is meta-data enrichement -->
Existing review try to classify existing articles according to various criteria such as industry focus, academic discipline, geography of research sites (countries), stakeholder focus (community, consumer, worker...), type of study (case study, theory development) or methodology (quantitative, qualitative, mixt).<ref name=":5" /> We selected the most relevant properties in Wikidata to reflect these classifications : {{Wikidata entity link|P921}} to describe what the article is about, {{Wikidata entity link|P8363}} to describe its main methodology/research design and {{Wikidata entity link|P6153}} to describe its geographical focus.
==== Main subjects ====
We first read the articles abstracts and listed relevant topics and their Wikidata ID in a shared spreadsheet. These topics were :
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Qid
!Main topic
!Description
|-
|[[d:Q42377797|Q42377797]]
|acceptability
|characteristic of a thing being subject to acceptance for some purpose
|-
|[[d:Q2798912|Q2798912]]
|accountability
|concept of responsibility in ethics, governance and decision-making
|-
|[[d:Q421953|Q421953]]
|actor–network theory
|theory within social science
|-
|[[d:Q84459973|Q84459973]]
|affordability
|
|-
|[[d:Q185836|Q185836]]
|age of a person
|time elapsed since a person was born
|-
|[[d:Q4764988|Q4764988]]
|animal studies
|field in which animals are studied in a variety of cross-disciplinary ways
|-
|[[d:Q4338318|Q4338318]]
|awareness
|state or ability to perceive, to feel, or to be conscious of events, objects, or sensory patterns
|-
|[[d:Q4930066|Q4930066]]
|blue carbon
|carbon captured by the world's coastal ocean ecosystems
|-
|[[d:Q430460|Q430460]]
|capability approach
|economic theory
|-
|[[d:Q7569|Q7569]]
|child
|human between birth and puberty
|-
|[[d:Q4116870|Q4116870]]
|civic engagement
|individual or group activity addressing issues of public concern
|-
|[[d:Q125928|Q125928]]
|climate change
|human-caused changes to climate on Earth
|-
|[[d:Q260607|Q260607]]
|climate change
adaptation
|process of adjustment to actual or expected climate change and its effects, seeking to moderate or avoid harm or exploit beneficial opportunities
|-
|[[d:Q1291678|Q1291678]]
|climate justice
|term linking the climate crisis with environmental and social justice
|-
|[[d:Q2270945|Q2270945]]
|co-creation
|product or service design process in which input from consumers plays a central role
|-
|[[d:Q16972712|Q16972712]]
|co-design
|approach to design attempting to actively involve all stakeholders
|-
|[[d:Q16324410|Q16324410]]
|coproduction
|product or service design process in which input from consumers plays a central role
|-
|[[d:Q11024|Q11024]]
|communication
|act of conveying intended meaning
|-
|[[d:Q177634|Q177634]]
|community
|social unit of human organisms who share common values
|-
|[[d:Q5154673|Q5154673]]
|community choice aggregation
|alternative energy supply system
|-
|[[d:Q113514984|Q113514984]]
|community energy
|delivery of community-led renewable energy, energy demand reduction and energy supply projects
|-
|[[d:Q65807646|Q65807646]]
|community participation
|The taking part by members of a community in decisionmaking processes related to the development of their community
|-
|[[d:Q188843|Q188843]]
|cosmopolitanism
|ideology that all human beings belong to a single community, based on a shared morality
|-
|[[d:Q11693783|Q11693783]]
|decarbonization
|change of economy, especially of energy industries, towards lower carbon dioxide emissions
|-
|[[d:Q284289|Q284289]]
|deliberative democracy
|form of democracy focusing on consensus
|-
|[[d:Q7174|Q7174]]
|democracy
|form of government
|-
|[[d:Q552284|Q552284]]
|distributive justice
|concept of the socially just allocation of goods
|-
|[[d:Q1230584|Q1230584]]
|diversity
|concept in sociology and political studies
|-
|[[d:Q1049066|Q1049066]]
|ecological economics
|research field on the interdependence of human economies and natural ecosystems
|-
|[[d:Q8134|Q8134]]
|economics
|social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
|-
|[[d:Q868575|Q868575]]
|empowerment
|providing increased autonomy
|-
|[[d:Q295865|Q295865]]
|ecosystem service
|benefits created by nature, forests and environmental systems
|-
|[[d:Q138359220|Q138359220]]
|energy citizenship
|involvement of citizens in energy-related decisions
|-
|[https://www.wikidata.org/w/index.php?title=Q131444737&redirect=no Q131444737]
|community energy
|[redirection]
|-
|[[d:Q16869822|Q16869822]]
|energy consumption
|amount of energy or power used
|-
|[[d:Q1358789|Q1358789]]
|senior
|elderly person
|-
|[[d:Q14944319|Q14944319]]
|energy democracy
|concept in environmental justice movement
|-
|[[d:Q192704|Q192704]]
|energy efficiency
|ratio between the useful energy output and the input of a machine
|-
|[[d:Q24965464|Q24965464]]
|energy modeling
|process of building computer models of energy systems in order to analyze them
|-
|[[d:Q1805337|Q1805337]]
|energy policy
|policy addressing energy issues
|-
|[[d:Q1341244|Q1341244]]
|energy poverty
|lack of access to modern energy services
|-
|[[d:Q3406659|Q3406659]]
|energy production
|conversion of energy from a primary source into a form useful to humans
|-
|[[d:Q117091181|Q117091181]]
|energy justice
|subconcept of economic equality
|-
|[[d:Q3456219|Q3456219]]
|energy renovation
|building works aimed at reducing energy consumption and decarbonising the energy sources used
|-
|[[d:Q2700433|Q2700433]]
|energy security
|national security considerations of energy availability
|-
|[[d:Q837718|Q837718]]
|energy storage
|capture of energy produced at one time for use at a later time
|-
|[[d:Q795757|Q795757]]
|energy transition
|long-term structural change towards sustainable energy systems
|-
|[[d:Q1479527|Q1479527]]
|environmental justice
|system of fairness
|-
|[[d:Q771773|Q771773]]
|fairness
|concept in sociology and generally the interaction of society
|-
|[[d:Q56395513|Q56395513]]
|farming system
|method of agricultural production defined by its physical practices and economic characteristics
|-
|[[d:Q5465532|Q5465532]]
|food system
|all processes and infrastructure involved in feeding a population
|-
|[[d:Q4421|Q4421]]
|forest
|dense collection of trees covering a relatively large area
|-
|[[d:Q48277|Q48277]]
|gender
|social concept which distinguish the different gender categories
|-
|[[d:Q1553864|Q1553864]]
|governance
|all of the processes of governing, whether undertaken by a government, market or network, whether over a family, tribe, formal or informal organization or territory and whether through the laws, norms, power or language of an organized society
|-
|[[d:Q8458|Q8458]]
|human rights
|inalienable fundamental rights to which a person is inherently entitled
|-
|[[d:Q11376059|Q11376059]]
|human rights violation
|act or omission which contravene the principles of human rights
|-
|[[d:Q103817|Q103817]]
|indigenous people
|first inhabitants of an area and their descendants
|-
|[[d:Q113561794|Q113561794]]
|indigenous science
|indigenous knowledge applied to the scientific method
|-
|[[d:Q770480|Q770480]]
|injustice
|quality relating to unfairness or undeserved outcomes
|-
|[[d:Q17142211|Q17142211]]
|interactional justice
|the perceived appropriateness of interpersonal treatment
|-
|[[d:Q1516555|Q1516555]]
|intersectionnality
|theoretical framework of multidimensional oppression
|-
|[[d:Q6316391|Q6316391]]
|just transition
|Framework developed by the trade union movement to encompass wide range of social interventions needed to secure decent work opportunities and a greener economy.
|-
|[[d:Q366139|Q366139]]
|legitimation
|the process of making something acceptable and normative to a group
|-
|[[d:Q3027857|Q3027857]]
|living lab
|user-centered, open innovation ecosystem integrating research and innovation in real life communities
|-
|[[d:Q59679511|Q59679511]]
|low income
|home with little money
|-
|[[d:Q43619|Q43619]]
|natural environment
|all living and non-living things occurring naturally on Earth or some region thereof
|-
|[[d:Q127514833|Q127514833]]
|nature-positive
|global goal to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030
|-
|[[d:Q13023682|Q13023682]]
|non-human
|organism not in the genus Homo
|-
|[[d:Q728646|Q728646]]
|partnership
|arrangement in which parties agree to cooperate to advance their mutual interests
|-
|[[d:Q3907287|Q3907287]]
|policy making
|the act of developing policy
|-
|[[d:Q9357091|Q9357091]]
|political theory
|class of theory
|-
|[[d:Q265425|Q265425]]
|postcolonialism
|academic discipline
|-
|[[d:Q25107|Q25107]]
|power
|ability to influence the behavior of others
|-
|[[d:Q442100|Q442100]]
|procedural justice
|fairness in the processes that resolve disputes and allocate resources
|-
|[[d:Q7249406|Q7249406]]
|project governance
|management framework
|-
|[[d:Q7257735|Q7257735]]
|public engagement
|Policy-making practice
|-
|[[d:Q541936|Q541936]]
|public participation
|participation of citizens in various policy decisions and planning processes
|-
|[[d:Q6142016|Q6142016]]
|recognition justice
|social philosophy theory
|-
|[[d:Q10509953|Q10509953]]
|renewable electricity
|electricity from renweable sources
|-
|[[d:Q12705|Q12705]]
|renewable energy
|energy collected from renewable resources
|-
|[[d:Q56510941|Q56510941]]
|renewable energy policy
|
|-
|[[d:Q1165392|Q1165392]]
|restorative justice
|approach to justice where victims and perpetrators mediate a restitution agreement
|-
|[[d:Q4414036|Q4414036]]
|rural population
|inhabitants of rural areas or of small towns classified as rural
|-
|[[d:Q17152351|Q17152351]]
|smart system
|adaptive intelligent systems
|-
|[[d:Q187588|Q187588]]
|social class
|group of people categorized in a hierarchy based on socioeconomic factors
|-
|[[d:Q264892|Q264892]]
|social justice
|concept that discrimination recognized in society should be remedied
|-
|[[d:Q34749|Q34749]]
|social science
|academic disciplines concerned with society and the relationships between individuals in society
|-
|[[d:Q2930198|Q2930198]]
|stakeholder participation
|involvement of groups or individuals affected by the actions of an entity
|-
|[[d:Q125359881|Q125359881]]
|sustainability transition
|
|-
|[[d:Q219416|Q219416]]
|sustainability
|ability of human civilization to coexist with the biosphere in a steady state
|-
|[[d:Q131201|Q131201]]
|sustainable development
|mode of human development that meets current demands without compromising the needs of future generations
|-
|[[d:Q7649586|Q7649586]]
|Sustainable Development Goals
|set of United Nations-defined global development goals and climate change
|-
|[[d:Q69883|Q69883]]
|urban planning
|technical and political process concerned with the use of land and design of the urban environment
|-
|[[d:Q920600|Q920600]]
|urban renewal
|program of land redevelopment in cities, often where there is urban decay
|-
|[[d:Q3376054|Q3376054]]
|vulnerable population
|group of persons whose range of options is severely limited, are subjected to coercion, or who may be compromised in their ability to give informed consent
|-
|[[d:Q107389921|Q107389921]]
|water-management
|
|-
|[[d:Q7981051|Q7981051]]
|well-being
|measure of how well life is to someone or a group with factors such as health, happiness and satisfaction
|-
|[[d:Q467|Q467]]
|woman
|female adult human
|-
|[[d:Q188867|Q188867]]
|future studies
|study of possible, probable, and preferable social, technological and political futures
|-
|[[d:Q1038171|Q1038171]]
|participatory design
|active involvement of all stakeholders in the design process
|}
<!-- include all below items using the wikidata link template
-->
Then, for each article, we inferred what the {{Wikidata entity link|P921}} was from the abstracts and author provided keywords.
==== Study types ====
Our review included only litterature reviews. We first read abstracts to identify all the [https://angryloki.github.io/wikidata-graph-builder/?item=Q2412849&property=P279&mode=reverse different types of litterature reviews] present in the corpus and created wikidata items which did not exist, for example {{Wikidata entity link|Q137209848}} and {{Wikidata entity link|Q137174203}}. We improved these method items using the methodological references cited in the reviewed papers. The types of reviews were :
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Qid
!Study type
!Description
|-
|[[d:Q603441|Q603441]]
|bibliometrics
|statistical analysis of written publications, such as books or articles
|-
|[[d:Q472342|Q472342]]
|scientometrics
|study of measuring and analysing science, technology and innovation
|-
|[[d:Q815382|Q815382]]
|meta-analysis
|statistical method that summarizes data from multiple sources
|-
|[[d:Q1504425|Q1504425]]
|systematic review
|publication type, study that gathers, analyzes, and communicates the results of research and information on a topic
|-
|[[d:Q2412849|Q2412849]]
|literature review
|process of information search and text of a review article (Q7318358), which includes the current knowledge including substantive findings, as well as theoretical and methodological contributions to a particular topic
|-
|[[d:Q6822263|Q6822263]]
|meta-regression
|statistical tool used in meta-analyses
|-
|[[d:Q7301211|Q7301211]]
|realist evaluation
|[...]
|-
|[[d:Q17007303|Q17007303]]
|combinatorial meta-analysis
|[...]
|-
|[[d:Q70470634|Q70470634]]
|network meta-analysis
|meta-analysis of randomized trials in which estimates of comparative treatment effects are visualized and interpreted from a network of interventions
|-
|[[d:Q101116078|Q101116078]]
|scoping review
|search for concepts by mapping the language and data which surrounds those concepts and adjusting the search method iteratively to synthesize evidence and assess the scope of an area of inquiry
|-
|[[d:Q110665014|Q110665014]]
|narrative review
|type of literature review, without structured method of retrieval and analysis
|-
|[[d:Q137174203|Q137174203]]
|conceptual review
|academic research aiming to review existing concepts and definitions in the litterature
|-
|[[d:Q137174450|Q137174450]]
|critical review
|type of literature review analysing strenghts, major contributions, mistakes and neglected issues in an academic field of research
|-
|[[d:Q137209848|Q137209848]]
|integrative literature review
|type of literature review
|-
|[[d:Q110665014|Q137211242]]
|narrative review
|type of literature review, without structured method of retrieval and analysis
|}<!-- include all below items using the wikidata link template
-->
[Include list and description of types of litterature reviews]
Then, we added the {{Wikidata entity link|P8363}} of each articles based on the abstract and method sections. In case of doubt, we compared our interpretation.
==== Research site ====
When an article had a specific geographical focus, we used the property {{Wikidata entity link|P6153}} to describe it. For example, the article "{{Wikidata entity link|Q137901202}}" focused on {{Wikidata entity link|Q132959}}.
==== Results ====
[insert table about the sample]
=== Knowledge modelling ===
Concept maps can be a powerful literature review tool<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Lewis|first=John Kennedy|date=2016|title=Using ATLAS.ti to Facilitate Data Analysis for a Systematic Review of Leadership Competencies in the Completion of a Doctoral Dissertation|url=https://www.ssrn.com/abstract=2850726|journal=SSRN Electronic Journal|language=en|doi=10.2139/ssrn.2850726|issn=1556-5068}}</ref> allowing to synthetize theoretical statements about relationship between concepts<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Panniers|first=Teresa L|last2=Feuerbach|first2=Renee Daiuta|last3=Soeken|first3=Karen L|date=2003-08-01|title=Methods in informatics: using data derived from a systematic review of health care texts to develop a concept map for use in the neonatal intensive care setting|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1532046403000911|journal=Journal of Biomedical Informatics|series=Building Nursing Knowledge through Informatics: From Concept Representation to Data Mining|volume=36|issue=4|pages=232–239|doi=10.1016/j.jbi.2003.09.010|issn=1532-0464}}</ref>. In the present study, we explored how concept map can be used to model the knowledge present in the paper we selected.
[define knowledge modelling]
==== Conceptual modelling ====
We first reflected on what kind of wikidata properties could be used to represent concepts and theories in wikidata. Capturing the content of a concept is not straightforward and there are various approaches coming from psychology and philosophy on the matter<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Origin of Concepts|last=Carey|first=Susan|date=2011|publisher=Oxford University Press USA - OSO|isbn=978-0-19-536763-8|series=Oxford Series in Cognitive Development Ser|location=Cary}}</ref> we summarize these approaches below and examine which wikidata properties exist to represent them.
* Definition: the content of a concept can be formed by its decomposition into other concepts. Many Wikidata properties can be relevant to model definitions, for example: {{Wikidata entity link|P1269}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P361}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P527}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P2670}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P1552}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P6477}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}}...
* Categorization: the content of a concept is formed by its illustration by an exemplar (a [[wikipedia:Prototype_theory|prototype]]) that best represent the concept. Apart from the inclusion of images to illustrate an item, Wikidata structure do not highlight exemplars. However, properties signifying relations of categorizations are among the most used with {{Wikidata entity link|P31}} and {{Wikidata entity link|P279}}.
* Theory: the content of a concept is formed by its role in providing explanation of the world. Wikidata includes several properties to describe causal relationships: {{Wikidata entity link|P828}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P1542}}, {{Wikidata entity link|P1537}}/{{Wikidata entity link|P1479}}.
* Essence: the content of a concept is "something" deep explaning the entity's existence and its properties. We can use concepts before knowing what they mean, and this is what allows us to revise our knowledge about it. The idea of essence is well represented by the QID of Wikidata entities: it is independent of language and definitions and we can create it before really knowing what all its properties will be.
* Origin: the content of the concept is determined causally by social and historial factors (e.g. someone inventing the concept and introducing its use in a language community). This can be represented by the property {{Wikidata entity link|P3938}}.
==== Thematic networks ====
[[File:Thematic network example.jpg|thumb|547x547px|Structure of a thematic network (Source: Attride-Stirling 2001)]]
A thematic network is “simply a way of organizing a thematic analysis of qualitative data”<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|last=Attride-Stirling|first=Jennifer|date=2001-12|title=Thematic networks: an analytic tool for qualitative research|url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/146879410100100307|journal=Qualitative Research|language=en|volume=1|issue=3|pages=385–405|doi=10.1177/146879410100100307|issn=1468-7941}}</ref>. It is compatible with classical coding strategies such as [[grounded theory]]<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Corbin|first=Juliet|last2=Strauss|first2=Anselm|date=1990-12-01|title=Grounded Theory Research: Procedures, Canons and Evaluative Criteria|url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/zfsoz-1990-0602/html|journal=Zeitschrift für Soziologie|language=en|volume=19|issue=6|pages=418–427|doi=10.1515/zfsoz-1990-0602|issn=2366-0325}}</ref>. Thematic networks can be used to visualise the data structure after identifying themes and help structure and interpret the data<ref name=":7" />. The principle is to assemble basic themes into more general themes.
Qualitative researchers usually use {{Wikidata entity link|Q4550939}} and qualitative coding (e.g. grounded theory) to identify themes and sub-themes.
However, the nature of the relationship between these various themes and sub-themes is often not specified.
*
==== Causal networks ====
The use of diagrams to represent causal relationship exist in various research practices. In statistics, researchers sometime present models with boxes and arrows representing correlations and/or causations<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://mirror.vcu.edu/pub/mx/doc/mxmang10.pdf|title=Statistical Modeling|last=Neale|first=Michael C.|last2=Boker|first2=Steven M.|last3=Xie|first3=Gary|last4=Maes|first4=Hermine H.|publisher=Richmond, VA: Department of Psychiatry|year=1999|location=Virginia Commonwealth University}}</ref>. In qualitative research, building grounded theory models is about "[accounting] for not only all the major emergent concepts, themes, and dimensions, but also for their dynamic interrelationships. Speaking in classic boxes-and-arrows terms, this process amounts to assembling the constellation of boxes with a special focus on the arrows."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Gioia|first=Dennis A.|last2=Corley|first2=Kevin G.|last3=Hamilton|first3=Aimee L.|date=2013-01|title=Seeking Qualitative Rigor in Inductive Research: Notes on the Gioia Methodology|url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1094428112452151|journal=Organizational Research Methods|language=en|volume=16|issue=1|pages=15–31|doi=10.1177/1094428112452151|issn=1094-4281}}</ref> Researchers relying on system theory also use causal loop diagram where boxes represent variables and arrows represent causal influence (positive or negative), causal relationship can "feedback" (two variables can influence each other)<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-031-01919-7_4|title=Causal Loop Diagrams|last=Barbrook-Johnson|first=Pete|last2=Penn|first2=Alexandra S.|date=2022|publisher=Springer International Publishing|isbn=978-3-031-01833-6|location=Cham|pages=47–59|language=en|doi=10.1007/978-3-031-01919-7_4}}</ref>.
Wikidata includes several properties to describe causal relationships:
* {{Wikidata entity link|P828}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1542}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1537}}
* {{Wikidata entity link|P1479}} : it is difficult to identify single causes for social phenomenons, many factors having an effect on the subject item will likely be contributing factors
==== Modelling concepts ====
To model concepts related to just transition. We read the selected papers and used them as source to build a knowledge graph in wikidata. For example, the paper {{Wikidata entity link|Q137901182}} mention "Energy democracy is both an ideal and a process"<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Droubi|first=Sufyan|last2=Heffron|first2=Raphael|last3=McCauley|first3=Darren|date=2022-04-01|title=A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q137901182|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|volume=86|pages=4|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444}}</ref>, we thus entered the wikidata statement {{Wikidata entity link|Q14944319}} is an {{Wikidata entity link|P31}} {{Wikidata entity link|Q840396}}, using the paper as source.
Challenges :
*{{Wikidata entity link|P31}}: concepts have a dual nature because they designate at the same time an idea and the entity that this idea represent. Energy democracy is a concept, an ideal, a process and an outcome. For material processes, the distinction between process and outcome is simpler than for social processes. For example, {{Wikidata entity link|Q11629}} (practice of applying paint) is different from {{Wikidata entity link|Q3305213}} (visual artwork).
* {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}}: concepts do not have goals in themselves, but the reality they represent can have goals
* wikidata current items are not really suited to model "meta-research" statements. For example, modelling the idea tha the literature on energy democracy is fragmented would require creating an item representing the energy democracy literature, not just energy democracy in general. Similarly, it can be difficult to model the chronological evolution of the definition of an idea (although it could be technically possible).
* To distinguish the causes of the concepts/discourses and the causes of the phenomenon itself, we used {{Wikidata entity link|P3938}} to indicate the origins of the concept or the movements promoting it.
* To distinguish goals from the process to reach it, we used {{Wikidata entity link|P3712}} to describe ideals and {{Wikidata entity link|P2670}} to describe processes.
* Wikidata does not seem to be the best tool to model quantitative statements, for example, the paper {{Wikidata entity link|Q137901196}} states that "9.8% of the final energy consumed in developing countries comes from modern renewable energy sources". Including energy data in Wikidata require using or creating specific properties (e.g. {{Wikidata entity link|P6826}})
* It is hard to represent in Wikidata affirmations related to missing knowlege, propositions of untested hypothesis, critique of existing research or research agenda recommandations
* When concepts are not precisely defined, statements cannot be modelled correctly. For example, in the sentence "management of social affairs by voluntary and self-governing associations is deemed to ensure that both citizen choice and public welfare are best served"<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Veelen|first=Bregje van|last2=Horst|first2=Dan van der|date=2018-12-01|title=What is energy democracy? Connecting social science energy research and political theory|url=https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q129652515|journal=Energy Research & Social Science|language=English|volume=46|pages=19–28|doi=10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010}}</ref>, "choice" could refer to {{Wikidata entity link|Q111986453}}, {{Wikidata entity link|Q1331926}}, or {{Wikidata entity link|Q12888920}} as "choice" can refer to the availability of different options, or the decision process to chose among them.
Advantages :
* Link toward unique identifiers for concepts, but also laws (e.g. {{Wikidata entity link|Q139764294}})
=== Writing ===
To cite articles we used the [[Template:Cite Q|Cite Q template.]] Each reference is an item in Wikidata and the template retrieve the necessary data to generate the citation references below.
== Data ==
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! QID !! Year !! DOI !! Title
|-
| [[d:Q137901191|Q137901191]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1002/GEO2.70040 10.1002/GEO2.70040] || Place-Based Sustainability Transformations for Just Futures: A Systematic Review
|-
| [[d:Q137901187|Q137901187]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1002/WCC.932 10.1002/WCC.932] || Public Communication of Climate and Justice: A Scoping Review
|-
| [[d:Q135979013|Q135979013]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S13280-025-02202-Z 10.1007/S13280-025-02202-Z] || Participatory approaches to climate adaptation, resilience, and mitigation: A systematic review
|-
| [[d:Q137901223|Q137901223]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S13412-021-00726-W 10.1007/S13412-021-00726-W] || A review of stakeholder participation studies in renewable electricity and water: does the resource context matter?
|-
| [[d:Q137901184|Q137901184]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S40518-021-00184-6 10.1007/S40518-021-00184-6] || Energy Storage as an Equity Asset.
|-
| [[d:Q114204627|Q114204627]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1007/S43621-021-00024-Z 10.1007/S43621-021-00024-Z] || Can public awareness, knowledge and engagement improve climate change adaptation policies?
|-
| [[d:Q137901209|Q137901209]] || 2026 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.AGSY.2025.104512 10.1016/J.AGSY.2025.104512] || Designing with non-humans for agricultural systems transformation: An interdisciplinary review and framework for reflection
|-
| [[d:Q137901201|Q137901201]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.COPSYC.2024.101987 10.1016/J.COPSYC.2024.101987] || Individual and community catalysts for Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) development
|-
| [[d:Q114197507|Q114197507]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.CRM.2022.100438 10.1016/J.CRM.2022.100438] || Advancements of sustainable development goals in co-production for climate change adaptation research
|-
| [[d:Q129203992|Q129203992]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.EGYR.2024.01.040 10.1016/J.EGYR.2024.01.040] || Empowering energy citizenship: Exploring dimensions and drivers in citizen engagement during the energy transition
|-
| [[d:Q137901216|Q137901216]] || 2026 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.EIAR.2025.108187 10.1016/J.EIAR.2025.108187] || From participation to partnership: A systematic review of public engagement in sustainable urban planning
|-
| [[d:Q137210566|Q137210566]] || 2016 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004 10.1016/J.ERSS.2015.10.004] || Energy justice: A conceptual review
|-
| [[d:Q115448818|Q115448818]] || 2016 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2016.04.001 10.1016/J.ERSS.2016.04.001] || Stakeholder involvement in sustainability science—A critical view
|-
| [[d:Q129652515|Q129652515]] || 2018 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010 10.1016/J.ERSS.2018.06.010] || What is energy democracy? Connecting social science energy research and political theory
|-
| [[d:Q137901196|Q137901196]] || 2020 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101716 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101716] || Of renewable energy, energy democracy, and sustainable development: A roadmap to accelerate the energy transition in developing countries
|-
| [[d:Q136447761|Q136447761]] || 2020 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101768 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101768] || Energy democracy as a process, an outcome and a goal: A conceptual review
|-
| [[d:Q137901204|Q137901204]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101834 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101834] || Identities, innovation, and governance: A systematic review of co-creation in wind energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901183|Q137901183]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101837 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101837] || Renewable energy for whom? A global systematic review of the environmental justice implications of renewable energy technologies
|-
| [[d:Q137901207|Q137901207]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101871 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101871] || Rethinking community empowerment in the energy transformation: A critical review of the definitions, drivers and outcomes
|-
| [[d:Q137901215|Q137901215]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101876 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101876] || Co-production in the wind energy sector: A systematic literature review of public engagement beyond invited stakeholder participation
|-
| [[d:Q114306511|Q114306511]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101907 10.1016/J.ERSS.2020.101907] || From consultation toward co-production in science and policy: A critical systematic review of participatory climate and energy initiatives
|-
| [[d:Q137901221|Q137901221]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102257 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102257] || The challenges of engaging island communities: Lessons on renewable energy from a review of 17 case studies
|-
| [[d:Q137901218|Q137901218]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102333 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102333] || The (in)justices of smart local energy systems: A systematic review, integrated framework, and future research agenda
|-
| [[d:Q137901182|Q137901182]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102444] || A critical review of energy democracy: A failure to deliver justice?
|-
| [[d:Q114306483|Q114306483]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102482 10.1016/J.ERSS.2021.102482] || The role of energy democracy and energy citizenship for participatory energy transitions: A comprehensive review
|-
| [[d:Q114306476|Q114306476]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102714 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102714] || What about citizens? A literature review of citizen engagement in sustainability transitions research
|-
| [[d:Q137901193|Q137901193]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102862 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102862] || When energy justice is contested: A systematic review of a decade of research on Sweden?s conflicted energy landscape
|-
| [[d:Q137901219|Q137901219]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102913 10.1016/J.ERSS.2022.102913] || Can we optimise for justice? Reviewing the inclusion of energy justice in energy system optimisation models
|-
| [[d:Q137901186|Q137901186]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103010 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103010] || Analysing intersections of justice with energy transitions in India- A systematic literature review
|-
| [[d:Q137901181|Q137901181]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103053 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103053] || Fostering justice through engagement: A literature review of public engagement in energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137211155|Q137211155]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103213 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103213] || A fairway to fairness: Toward a richer conceptualization of fairness perceptions for just energy transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901217|Q137901217]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103221 10.1016/J.ERSS.2023.103221] || Powering just energy transitions: A review of the justice implications of community choice aggregation
|-
| [[d:Q137901199|Q137901199]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104016 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104016] || Making energy renovations equitable: A literature review of decision-making criteria for a just energy transition in residential buildings
|-
| [[d:Q137901188|Q137901188]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104036 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104036] || Community energy justice: A review of origins, convergence, and a research agenda
|-
| [[d:Q137901211|Q137901211]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104067 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104067] || Psychological and social factors driving citizen involvement in renewable energy communities: A systematic review
|-
| [[d:Q137901192|Q137901192]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104149 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104149] || Assessing social impacts and Energy Justice along green hydrogen supply chains: a capability-based framework
|-
| [[d:Q137901195|Q137901195]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104422 10.1016/J.ERSS.2025.104422] || Out of place, scale and time? Navigating injustices across mission arenas of the German Energiewende
|-
| [[d:Q137901185|Q137901185]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ESD.2024.101546 10.1016/J.ESD.2024.101546] || Characterizing 'injustices' in clean energy transitions in Africa
|-
| [[d:Q137901226|Q137901226]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JCLEPRO.2024.143470 10.1016/J.JCLEPRO.2024.143470] || Energy justice and sustainable urban renewal: A systematic review of low-income old town communities
|-
| [[d:Q137901222|Q137901222]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JENVMAN.2024.120804 10.1016/J.JENVMAN.2024.120804] || Forest, climate, and policy literature lacks acknowledgement of environmental justice, diversity, equity, and inclusion
|-
| [[d:Q115441381|Q115441381]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.RSER.2021.111504 10.1016/J.RSER.2021.111504] || Participatory methods in energy system modelling and planning – A review
|-
| [[d:Q137901205|Q137901205]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1016/J.RSER.2025.115892 10.1016/J.RSER.2025.115892] || A systematic review of the intersection between energy justice and human rights
|-
| [[d:Q137901225|Q137901225]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1017/SUS.2024.24 10.1017/SUS.2024.24] || Blue carbon as just transition? A structured literature review
|-
| [[d:Q137901220|Q137901220]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1017/SUS.2025.2 10.1017/SUS.2025.2] || Toward an intersectional equity approach in social-ecological transformations
|-
| [[d:Q137901203|Q137901203]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2023.2256697 10.1080/14693062.2023.2256697] || Exploring the democracy-climate nexus: a review of correlations between democracy and climate policy performance
|-
| [[d:Q137901164|Q137901164]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1111/GEC3.12662 10.1111/GEC3.12662] || Creating fairer futures for sustainability transitions
|-
| [[d:Q137901227|Q137901227]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.1139/ER-2024-0018 10.1139/ER-2024-0018] || Community engagement in nature-positive food systems programming and research in East and Southern Africa: a review
|-
| [[d:Q119955266|Q119955266]] || 2019 || [https://doi.org/10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-101718-033103 10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-101718-033103] || Co-Producing Sustainability: Reordering the Governance of Science, Policy, and Practice
|-
| [[d:Q137901206|Q137901206]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-112621-063400 10.1146/ANNUREV-ENVIRON-112621-063400] || Metrics for Decision-Making in Energy Justice
|-
| [[d:Q137901213|Q137901213]] || 2022 || [https://doi.org/10.1186/S13705-021-00330-4 10.1186/S13705-021-00330-4] || Mapping emergent public engagement in societal transitions: a scoping review
|-
| [[d:Q137901163|Q137901163]] || 2025 || [https://doi.org/10.17573/CEPAR.2025.2.09 10.17573/CEPAR.2025.2.09] || From Co-Creation to Circular Cities: Exploring Living Labs in EU Governance Frameworks - A Literature Review
|-
| [[d:Q137901197|Q137901197]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/EN17143512 10.3390/EN17143512] || A Systematic Review on the Path to Inclusive and Sustainable Energy Transitions
|-
| [[d:Q104887325|Q104887325]] || 2019 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU11041023 10.3390/SU11041023] || Deliberation and the Promise of a Deeply Democratic Sustainability Transition
|-
| [[d:Q137901202|Q137901202]] || 2021 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU13042128 10.3390/SU13042128] || A Review of Energy Communities in Sub-Saharan Africa as a Transition Pathway to Energy Democracy
|-
| [[d:Q137901210|Q137901210]] || 2023 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU15032441 10.3390/SU15032441] || Sustainable Project Governance: Scientometric Analysis and Emerging Trends
|-
| [[d:Q137901224|Q137901224]] || 2024 || [https://doi.org/10.3390/SU16198700 10.3390/SU16198700] || Empowering Communities to Act for a Change: A Review of the Community Empowerment Programs towards Sustainability and Resilience
|}
== References ==
{{References}}
4gytb2cvw8m0l7vsaucsoa8hq1jcgoc
User:Dc.samizdat/Golden chords of the 120-cell
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2808866
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2026-05-13T12:47:37Z
Dc.samizdat
2856930
/* The 8-point regular polytopes */
2808866
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{align|center|David Brooks Christie}}
{{align|center|dc@samizdat.org}}
{{align|center|Draft in progress}}
{{align|center|January 2026 - April 2026}}
<blockquote>Steinbach discovered the formula for the ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. Fontaine and Hurley extended this result, discovering a formula for the reciprocal of a regular polygon chord derived geometrically from the chord's star polygon. We observe that these findings in plane geometry apply more generally, to polytopes of any dimensionality. Fontaine and Hurley's geometric procedure for finding the reciprocals of the chords of a regular polygon from their star polygons also finds the rotational geodesics of any polytope of any dimensionality.</blockquote>
== Introduction ==
Steinbach discovered the Diagonal Product Formula and the Golden Fields family of ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. He showed how this family extends beyond the pentagon {5} with its well-known golden bisection proportional to 𝜙, finding that the heptagon {7} has an analogous trisection, the nonagon {9} has an analogous quadrasection, and the hendecagon {11} has an analogous pentasection, an extended family of golden proportions with quasiperiodic properties.
Kappraff and Adamson extended these findings in plane geometry to a theory of Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, showing that the Golden Fields not only do not end with the hendecagon, they form an infinite number of periodic trajectories when operated on by the Mandelbrot operator. They found a relation between the edges of star polygons and dynamical systems in the state of chaos, revealing a connection between chaos theory, number, and rotations in Coxeter Euclidean geometry.
Fontaine and Hurley examined Steinbach's finding that the length of each chord of a regular polygon is both the product of two chords and the sum of a set of smaller chords, so that in rotations to add is to multiply. They illustrated Steinbach's sets of additive chords lying parallel to each other in the plane (pointing in the same direction), and by applying Steinbach's formula more generally they found another summation relation of signed parallel chords (pointing in opposite directions) which relates each chord length to its reciprocal, and relates the summation to a distinct star polygon rotation.
We examine these remarkable findings (which stem from study of the chords of humble regular polygons) in higher-dimensional spaces, specifically in the chords, polygons and rotations of the [[120-cell]], the largest four-dimensional regular convex polytope.
== Visualizing the 120-cell ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" width="400"
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:120-cell.gif|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point 120-cell <small><math>\{5,3,3\}</math></small> performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]].{{Sfn|Hise|2011|loc=File:120-cell.gif|ps=; "Created by Jason Hise with Maya and Macromedia Fireworks. A 3D projection of a 120-cell performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]]."}} In this simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges are shown; its 29 interior chords are not rendered. Therefore even though it is translucent, only its outer surface is visible. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 5-cells, 16-cells, 8-cells, 24-cells, 600-cells and its much larger inventory of polyhedra, are completely invisible in this view, as none of their edges are rendered at all.
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point [[W:Great grand stellated 120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] <small><math>\{\tfrac{5}{2},3,3\}</math></small>.{{Sfn|Ruen: Great grand stellated 120-cell|2007}} The 120-cell is its convex hull. The projection to the left renders only the 120-cell's shortest chord, its 1200 edges. The projection above also renders only one of the 120-cell's 30 chords, the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. The 120-cell itself (the convex hull) is invisible in this view, as its edges are not rendered.
|}
[[120-cell#Geometry|The 120-cell is the maximally complex regular 4-polytope]], containing inscribed instances of every regular 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-polytope, except the regular polygons of more than {15} sides.
The 120-cell is the convex hull of a regular [[120-cell#Relationships among interior polytopes|compound of each of the 6 regular convex 4-polytopes]]. They are the [[5-cell|5-point (5-cell) 4-simplex]], the [[16-cell|8-point (16-cell) 4-orthoplex]], the [[W:Tesseract|16-point (8-cell) tesseract]], the [[24-cell|24-point (24-cell)]], the [[600-cell|120-point (600-cell)]], and the [[120-cell|600-point (120-cell)]]. The 120-cell is the convex hull of a compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells, of 75 disjoint 16-cells, of 25 disjoint 24-cells, and of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
The 120-cell contains an even larger inventory of irregular polytopes, created by the intersection of multiple instances of these component regular 4-polytopes. Many are quite unexpected, because they do not occur as components of any regular polytope smaller than the 120-cell. As just one example among the [[120-cell#Concentric hulls|sections of the 120-cell]], there is an irregular 24-point polyhedron with 16 triangle faces and 4 nonagon {9} faces.{{Sfn|Moxness|}}
Most renderings of the 120-cell, like the rotating projection here, only illustrate its outer surface, which is a honeycomb of face-bonded dodecahedral cells. Only the objects in its 3-dimensional surface are rendered, namely the 120 dodecahedra, their pentagon faces, and their edges. Although the 120-cell has chords of 30 distinct lengths, in this kind of simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges (its shortest chord) are shown. Its 29 interior chords, the edges of objects in the interior of the 120-cell, are not rendered, so interior objects are not visible at all.
Visualizing the complete interior of the 600-vertex 120-cell in a single image is impractical because of its complexity. Only four 120-cell edges are incident at each vertex, but [[120-cell#Chords|600 chords (of all 30 lengths)]] are incident at ''each'' vertex.
== Compounds in the 120-cell ==
The 8-point (16-cell), not the 5-point (5-cell), is the smallest building block; it compounds to every larger regular 4-polytope. The 5-point (5-cell) does compound to the 600-point (120-cell), but it does not fit into any smaller regular 4-polytope.
The 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 2 in the 16-point (8-cell), and by 3 in the 24-point (24-cell). The 16-point (8-cell) compounds in the 24-point (24-cell) by 3 non-disjoint instances of itself, with each of the 24 vertices shared by two 16-point (8-cells). The 24-point (24-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell), and the 120-point (600-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell).
The 24-point (24-cell) also compounds by <math>5^2</math> non-disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell); it compounds in 5 disjoint instances of itself, 10 (not 5) different ways. Whichever set of 5 disjoint 24-point (24-cells) are assembled, the resulting 120-point (600-cell) contains 25 distinct 24-point (24-cells), not just 5 (or 10). This implies that 15 disjoint 8-point (16-cells) will construct a 120-point (600-cell), which will contain 75 distinct 8-point (16-cells).
The 600-point (120-cell) is 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), just 2 different ways (not 5 or 10 ways), so it is 10 distinct 120-point (600-cells). This implies that the 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 3 times <math>5^2</math> (75) disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell), which contains <math>3^2</math> times <math>5^2</math> (225) distinct instances of the 24-point (24-cell), and <math>3^3</math> times <math>5^2</math> (675) distinct instances of the 8-point (16-cell).
These facts were discovered painstakingly by various researchers, and no one has found a general rule governing subsumption relations among regular polytopes. The reasons for some of their numeric incidence relations are far from obvious. [[W:Pieter Hendrik Schoute|Schoute]] was the first to see that the 120-point (600-cell) is a compound of 5 24-point (24-cells) ''10 different ways'', and after he saw it a hundred years lapsed until Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne proved his result, and showed why.{{Sfn|Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne|2020|loc=''The geometry of H4 polytopes''}}
So much for the compounds of 16-cells. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. That stellated compound (without its convex hull of 120-cell edges) is the [[w:Great_grand_stellated_120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] illustrated above, the final regular [[W:Stellation|stellation]] of the 120-cell, and the only [[W:Schläfli-Hess polychoron|regular star 4-polytope]] to have the 120-cell for its convex hull. The edges of the great grand stellated 120-cell are <math>\phi^6</math> as long as those of its 120-cell [[W:List of polyhedral stellations#Stellation process|stellation core]] deep inside.
The compound of 120 disjoint 5-point (5-cells) can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point (600-cell), expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell, by adding 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells): a 120-cell.
== Thirty distinguished distances ==
The 30 numbers listed in the table are all-important in Euclidean geometry. A case can be made on symmetry grounds that their squares are the 30 most important numbers between 0 and 4. The 30 rows of the table are the 30 distinct [[120-cell#Geodesic rectangles|chord lengths of the unit-radius 120-cell]], the largest regular convex 4-polytope. Since the 120-cell subsumes all smaller regular polytopes, its 30 chords are the complete chord set of all the regular polytopes that can be constructed in the first four dimensions of Euclidean space, except for regular polygons of more than 15 sides.
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;text-align:center"
!rowspan=2|<math>c_t</math>
!rowspan=2|arc
!rowspan=2|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{n}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|<math>\left\{p\right\}</math>
!rowspan=2|<small><math>m\left\{\frac{k}{d}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|Steinbach roots
!colspan=7|Chord lengths of the unit 120-cell
|-
!colspan=5|unit-radius length <math>c_t</math>
!colspan=2|unit-edge length <math>c_t/c_1</math><br>in 120-cell of radius <math>c_8=\sqrt{2}\phi^2</math>
|-
|<small><math>c_{1,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>15.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{4,1}-c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.270091</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^4}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.072949}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>25.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{15\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(c_{18,1}-c_{4,1}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{3-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.437016</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.190983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{3,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>36{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{10\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>3 \left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>0.618034</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.381966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.28825</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>41.4{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.707107</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{5,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>44.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{\frac{15}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.756934</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.572949}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.80252</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{6,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>49.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{17}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.831254</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5}}{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.690983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.07768</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{7,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>56.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.93913</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.881966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.47709</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>60{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.70246</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{9,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>66.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{2 \phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.09132</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.04057</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{10,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>69.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2 \sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.14412</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi }{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>4.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{11,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>72{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{6}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.17557</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.38197}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \sqrt{3-\phi } \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.3525</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>75.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{24}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.22474</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.53457</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{13,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>81.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.30038</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.8146</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{14,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>84.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi } c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{1+\sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.345</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi }}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5} \phi }{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.9798</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{15,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>90.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.41421</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{16,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>95.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{29}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.4802</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.48037</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{17,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>98.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{31}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.51954</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(7+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.62605</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{18,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>104.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{8}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.58114</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{5} \sqrt{\phi ^4}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{19,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>108.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{3,1}+c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>5.9907</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{20,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>110.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.64042</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.07359</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{21,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>113.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{19}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.67601</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\chi }{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.20537</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{22,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>120{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{10}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.73205</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{6} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.41285</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{23,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>124.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{41}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }+\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.7658</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.11803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.53779</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{24,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>130.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.81907</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\sqrt{5}}{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.73503</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{25,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>135.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.85123</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi ^2}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^4}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.42705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^4</math></small>
|<small><math>6.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{26,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>138.6{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{12}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.87083</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{7} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.92667</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{27,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>144{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{12}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{5}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.90211</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\phi +2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{2 \phi +4}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.0425</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{28,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>154.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.95167</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.22598</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{29,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>164.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{14}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.98168</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3 \phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.92705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>7.33708</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{30,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>180{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{15}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>7.40492</math></small>
|-
|rowspan=4 colspan=6|
|rowspan=4 colspan=4|
<small><math>\phi</math></small> is the golden ratio:<br>
<small><math>\phi ^2-\phi -1=0</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }+1=\phi</math></small>, and: <small><math>\phi+1=\phi^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }::1::\phi ::\phi ^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>1/\phi</math></small> and <small><math>\phi</math></small> are the golden sections of <small><math>\sqrt{5}</math></small>:<br>
<small><math>\phi +\frac{1}{\phi }=\sqrt{5}</math></small>
|colspan=2|<small><math>\phi = (\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>1.618034</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\chi = (3\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = (3\sqrt{5} - 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = 11/\chi = 22/(3\sqrt{5} + 1)</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|}
...
== The 8-point regular polytopes ==
In 2-space we have the regular 8-point octagon, in 3-space the regular 8-point cube, and in 4-space the regular 8-point [[16-cell]].
A planar octagon with rigid edges of unit length has chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.84776,r_3=1+\sqrt{2} \approx 2.41421,r_4=\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{8}} \approx 2.61313</math>
The chord ratio <math>r_3=1+\sqrt{2}</math> is a geometrical proportion, the [[W:Silver ratio|silver ratio]]. Fontaine and Hurley's procedure for obtaining the reciprocal of a chord tells us that:
:<math>r_3-r_1-r_1=1/r_3 \approx 0.41421</math>
Note that <math>1/r_3=\sqrt{2}-1=r_3-2</math>.
If we embed this planar octagon in 3-space, we can make it skew, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from three others instead of two others, so we obtain a unit-edge cube with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1, r_2=\sqrt{2}, r_3=\sqrt{3}, r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
If we embed this cube in 4-space, we can skew it some more, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from six others instead of three others, so we obtain a unit-edge 4-polytope with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=1,r_3=1,r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
All of its chords except its long diameters are the same unit length as its edge. In fact they are its 24 edges, and it is a 16-cell of radius <small><math>1/\sqrt{2}</math></small>.
[[File:octagon16cell.png|thumb|Orthogonal projection of a regular 16-cell to the [[16-cell#Projections|B<sub>4</sub> Coxeter plane]]. Only its edges are shown; its long diameter chords are not drawn. All 24 edges are the same length, and none are parallel to the view plane. In a unit-radius 16-cell, the radius of this projection is ....]]
The [[16-cell]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {3,3,4}. It has 8 vertices, 24 edges, 32 equilateral triangle faces, and 16 regular tetrahedron cells. It is the [[16-cell#Octahedral dipyramid|four-dimensional analogue of the octahedron]], and each of its four orthogonal central hyperplanes is an octahedron.
The only planar regular polygons found in the 16-cell are face triangles and central plane squares, but the 16-cell also contains a regular skew octagon, its [[W:Petrie polygon|Petrie polygon]]. The chords of this regular octagon, which lies skew in 4-space, are those given above for the 16-cell, as opposed to those for the cube or the regular octagon in the plane. The 16-cell has 6 such Petrie octagons, which share the same 8 vertices but have distinct sets of 8 edges each.
The regular octad has higher symmetry in 4-space than it does in 2-space. The 16-cell is the 4-orthoplex, the simplest regular 4-polytope after the [[5-cell|4-simplex]]. All the larger regular 4-polytopes, including the 120-cell, are compounds of the 16-cell. The regular octagon exhibits this high symmetry only when embedded in 4-space at the vertices of the 16-cell.
The 16-cell constitutes an [[W:Orthonormal basis|orthonormal basis]] for the choice of a 4-dimensional Cartesian reference frame, because its vertices define four orthogonal axes. The eight vertices of a unit-radius 16-cell are (±1, 0, 0, 0), (0, ±1, 0, 0), (0, 0, ±1, 0), (0, 0, 0, ±1). All vertices are connected by <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges except opposite pairs. In this convenient unit-radius 4-coordinate system, the planar octagon we started with had chords of length:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{2},r_2=\sqrt{2(2+\sqrt{2})} \approx 2.61313,r_3=2+\sqrt{2} \approx 3.41421,r_4=2 \sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 3.69552</math>
none of which chords occur in a 16-cell or 120-cell except <math>r_1=\sqrt{2}</math>. Note that the radius of this octagon is:
:<math>\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} = r_2/\sqrt{2}=\sqrt{r_3} \approx 1.84776</math>
which was <math>r_2</math> in our original unit-edge octagon.
In the unit-radius 120-cell, the great square edge chord <math>c_{15} = \sqrt{2}</math> occurs in 675 distinct (75 disjoint) 16-cells. The vertex coordinates of each 16-cell form 6 central squares lying in 6 pairwise [[W:Orthogonal|orthogonal]] coordinate planes. Great squares in ''opposite'' planes that do not share an axis (e.g. in the ''xy'' and ''wz'' planes) are completely disjoint (they do not intersect at any vertices). These planes are [[W:Completely orthogonal|completely orthogonal]].{{Efn|name=Six orthogonal planes of the Cartesian basis}}
[[W:Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space|Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space]] can be seen as the composition of two 2-dimensional rotations in completely orthogonal planes. The general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation in pairs of completely orthogonal planes. Two completely orthogonal planes are called invariant planes of the rotation when all points in the plane rotate on circles that remain in the plane, even as the whole plane tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) into another plane. The two completely orthogonal rotations of each plane (like a wheel, and like a coin flipping) are simultaneous but independent, in that they are not geometrically constrained to turn at the same rate. However, the most circular kind of rotation (as opposed to an elliptical double rotation of a rigid spherical object) occurs when the invariant planes do rotate through the same angle in the same time interval. Such equi-angled double rotations are called [[w:SO(4)#Isoclinic_rotations|isoclinic]], also [[w:William_Kingdon_Clifford|Clifford]] displacements.
The 16-cell is the simplest possible frame in which to [[16-cell#Rotations|observe 4-dimensional rotations]] because its characteristic isoclinic rotations feature a single pair of invariant rotation planes. In the 16-cell an isoclinic rotation by 90° in any pair of invariant completely orthogonal square central planes takes every square central plane to its completely orthogonal square central plane in a twisting displacment, as they tilt sideways 90° into each other's plane while rotating 90° internally. All the vertices move at once on separate circular [[w:Geodesic|geodesics]], displaced 90° in 8 orthogonal directions, and the rigid 16-cell assumes a new orientation in 4-space. When the 90° isoclinic rotation is continued in the same rotational direction through an additional 90°, each vertex is again displaced 90°, but from the new orientation in a direction orthogonal to its first 90° displacement. After 360° of rotation each vertex reaches its antipodal position.
The trajectory of each vertex over each 90° isoclinic rotational displacement is a one-eighth segment of its geodesic orbit. Its entire orbit traces a circular helix in 4-space, and also traces a great circle twice in one of the two moving invariant rotation planes. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions just once and returns to its original position, and the 16-cell returns to its original orientation.
== Hypercubes ==
The long diameter of the unit-edge [[W:Hypercube|hypercube]] of dimension <small><math>n</math></small> is <small><math>\sqrt{n}</math></small>, so the unit-edge [[w:Tesseract|4-hypercube, the 16-point (8-cell) tesseract,]] has chords:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{1},r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3=\sqrt{3},r_4=\sqrt{4}</math>
Uniquely in its 4-dimensional case, the hypercube's edge length equals its radius, like the hexagon. We call such polytopes ''radially equilateral'', because they can be constructed from equilateral triangles which meet at their center, each contributing two radii and an edge. The cuboctahedron and the 24-cell are also radially equilateral.
The [[W:Tesseract|tesseract]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {4,3,3}. It has 16 vertices, 32 edges, 24 square faces, and 8 cube cells. It is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube.
The tesseract is the [[W:Dual polytope|dual polytope]] of the 16-cell. They have the same Petrie polygon, the regular octagon, but the tesseract contains 2 disjoint instances and 4 distinct instances of the skew octagon. We can construct the tesseract the way we constructed the 16-cell, by skewing a planar octagon's edges so they become edges of the 4-polytope. Because the tesseract has 16 vertices we will need two planar octagons, and to start we must embedded them in 4-space as completely orthogonal planes that intersect at only one point, their common center. Because the tesseract is radially equilateral (unlike the 16-cell), to build a unit-radius tesseract we start with our original octagon of unit-edge length, rather than the octagon of edge length <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> that we needed to build the unit-radius 16-cell.
For our tesseract construction we skew each planar octagon into a cube, so we have a compound of two completely orthogonal cubes. Provided the planes were completely orthogonal in 4-space and we skewed them both the same way, the 16 vertices will be the vertices of a tesseract with half of its 32 edges missing.
The 16-point tesseract is the convex hull of a compound of two 8-point 16-cells, in exact dimensional analogy to the way the 8-point cube is the convex hull of a [[W:Stellated octahedron|compound of two regular 4-point tetrahedra]]. The [[W:Demihypercube|demihypercubes]] occupy alternate vertices of the hypercubes. The diagonals of the square faces of the unit-radius tesseract are the <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges of two unit-radius 16-cells, which are also the edges of the square central planes.
Because the tesseract contains two 16-cells in alternate positions it has two sets of 6 orthogonal square central planes. Two angles are required to specify the relationship between two planes in 4-space. Pairs of planes within each 16-cell are 90° apart in one angle, and either 0° or 90° apart in the other angle. They are 90° apart in both angles if and only if they are completely orthogonal planes, 90° apart by isoclinic rotation, with no vertices in common and their corresponding vertices 180° apart. Otherwise they are 0° apart in one of the angles, 90° apart by simple rotation with their corresponding vertices 90° apart, and they intersect in one axis and lie in a common 3-dimensional hyperplane.{{Efn|A double rotation in which one of the two angles of rotation is 0°, so that one of the completely orthogonal invariant planes does not rotate, is called a simple rotation. Ordinary rotations observed in a 3-dimensional space are simple rotations.}}
A pair of square central planes from alternate 16-cells are 60° apart by isoclinic rotation, with their corresponding vertices 120° apart. The planes are not orthogonal or parallel, so they intersect in a line somewhere, but they have no vertices in common, they have no 3-dimensional hyperplane in common, and they cannot reach each other by simple rotation. Such pairs of objects are called [[W:Clifford parallel|Clifford parallel]] because all their corresponding pairs of vertices are the same distance apart, although they are not parallel in the usual sense, because they have a common center. Not only the alternate 16-cells' corresponding square central planes, but also the 16-cells themselves, are Clifford parallel objects.
We can rotate the tesseract isoclinically the way we rotated the 16-cell, by 90° in two completely orthogonal invariant square central planes, with the same effect on both alternate 16-cells. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation in invariant square central planes each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions of its 16-cell just once and returns to its original position, but it does not visit the vertex positions of the other 16-cell. The skew octagon geodesic orbits of the 16 vertices are disjoint circular helixes, and those 16 circular helixes are Clifford parallel objects.
== The 24-cell ==
In 2-space we have the radially equilateral 6-point hexagon. In 3-space we have the radially equilateral 12-point cuboctahedron, with 4 hexagonal central planes. In 4-space we have the radially equilateral 24-point 24-cell, with 4 cuboctahedral central hyperplanes and 16 hexagonal central planes.
Great hexagons are a rounder choice than great squares for the invariant rotation planes in which to rotate a 4-polytope isoclinically. The complete hexagonal isoclinic revolution requires 720° like the square isoclinic revolution, but it is completed in 6 chordal steps of 120° each rather than 8 chordal steps of 90° each.
...
== The 600-cell ==
...
== Finally the 120-cell ==
...
== Conclusions ==
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery is more than a formula for the reciprocal of a regular ''n''-polygon diagonal. It also yields the discrete sequence of isocline chords of the distinct isoclinic rotation characteristic of a ''d''-dimensional regular polytope. The characteristic rotational chord sequence of the ''d''-polytope can be represented geometrically in two dimensions on a distinct star polygon, but it lies on a geodesic circle through ''d''-dimensional space. Fontaine and Hurley discovered the geodesic topology of polytopes generally. Their procedure will reveal the geodesics of arbitrary non-uniform polytopes, since it can be applied to a polytope of any dimensionality and irregularity, by first fitting the polytope to the smallest regular polygon whose chords include its chords.
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery of a chordal formula for isoclinic rotations closes the circuit on Kappraff and Adamson's discovery of a rotational connection between dynamical systems, Steinbach's golden fields, and Coxeter's Euclidean geometry of ''n'' dimensions. Application of the Fontaine and Hurley procedure in higher-dimensional spaces demonstrates why the connection exists: because polytope sequences generally, from Steinbach's golden polygon chord sequences, to chord sequences in isoclinic rotation helixes, to subsumption relations in the sequence of regular 4-polytopes, arise as expressions of the reflections and rotations of distinct Coxeter symmetry groups, when those various groups interact.
== Appendix: Sequence of regular 4-polytopes ==
{{Regular convex 4-polytopes|wiki=W:|columns=7}}
== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=1997 | title=Golden fields: A case for the Heptagon | journal=Mathematics Magazine | volume=70 | issue=Feb 1997 | pages=22–31 | doi=10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996494 | jstor=2691048 | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|1997}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=2000 | title=Sections Beyond Golden| journal=Bridges: Mathematical Connections in Art, Music and Science | issue=2000 | pages=35-44 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2000/bridges2000-35.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|2000}}}}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Jablan | first2=Slavik | last3=Adamson | first3=Gary | last4=Sazdanovich | first4=Radmila | year=2004 | title=Golden Fields, Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, and Chaotic Matrices | journal=Forma | volume=19 | pages=367-387 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2005/bridges2005-369.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff, Jablan, Adamson & Sazdanovich|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Adamson | first2=Gary | year=2004 | title=Polygons and Chaos | journal=Dynamical Systems and Geometric Theories | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2001/bridges2001-67.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff & Adamson|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Fontaine | first1=Anne | last2=Hurley | first2=Susan | year=2006 | title=Proof by Picture: Products and Reciprocals of Diagonal Length Ratios in the Regular Polygon | journal=Forum Geometricorum | volume=6 | pages=97-101 | url=https://scispace.com/pdf/proof-by-picture-products-and-reciprocals-of-diagonal-length-1aian8mgp9.pdf }}
{{Refend}}
9h515dw9c2z0cxvpn4xpvys39u7i9i0
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/* The 8-point regular polytopes */
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text/x-wiki
{{align|center|David Brooks Christie}}
{{align|center|dc@samizdat.org}}
{{align|center|Draft in progress}}
{{align|center|January 2026 - April 2026}}
<blockquote>Steinbach discovered the formula for the ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. Fontaine and Hurley extended this result, discovering a formula for the reciprocal of a regular polygon chord derived geometrically from the chord's star polygon. We observe that these findings in plane geometry apply more generally, to polytopes of any dimensionality. Fontaine and Hurley's geometric procedure for finding the reciprocals of the chords of a regular polygon from their star polygons also finds the rotational geodesics of any polytope of any dimensionality.</blockquote>
== Introduction ==
Steinbach discovered the Diagonal Product Formula and the Golden Fields family of ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. He showed how this family extends beyond the pentagon {5} with its well-known golden bisection proportional to 𝜙, finding that the heptagon {7} has an analogous trisection, the nonagon {9} has an analogous quadrasection, and the hendecagon {11} has an analogous pentasection, an extended family of golden proportions with quasiperiodic properties.
Kappraff and Adamson extended these findings in plane geometry to a theory of Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, showing that the Golden Fields not only do not end with the hendecagon, they form an infinite number of periodic trajectories when operated on by the Mandelbrot operator. They found a relation between the edges of star polygons and dynamical systems in the state of chaos, revealing a connection between chaos theory, number, and rotations in Coxeter Euclidean geometry.
Fontaine and Hurley examined Steinbach's finding that the length of each chord of a regular polygon is both the product of two chords and the sum of a set of smaller chords, so that in rotations to add is to multiply. They illustrated Steinbach's sets of additive chords lying parallel to each other in the plane (pointing in the same direction), and by applying Steinbach's formula more generally they found another summation relation of signed parallel chords (pointing in opposite directions) which relates each chord length to its reciprocal, and relates the summation to a distinct star polygon rotation.
We examine these remarkable findings (which stem from study of the chords of humble regular polygons) in higher-dimensional spaces, specifically in the chords, polygons and rotations of the [[120-cell]], the largest four-dimensional regular convex polytope.
== Visualizing the 120-cell ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" width="400"
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:120-cell.gif|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point 120-cell <small><math>\{5,3,3\}</math></small> performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]].{{Sfn|Hise|2011|loc=File:120-cell.gif|ps=; "Created by Jason Hise with Maya and Macromedia Fireworks. A 3D projection of a 120-cell performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]]."}} In this simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges are shown; its 29 interior chords are not rendered. Therefore even though it is translucent, only its outer surface is visible. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 5-cells, 16-cells, 8-cells, 24-cells, 600-cells and its much larger inventory of polyhedra, are completely invisible in this view, as none of their edges are rendered at all.
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point [[W:Great grand stellated 120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] <small><math>\{\tfrac{5}{2},3,3\}</math></small>.{{Sfn|Ruen: Great grand stellated 120-cell|2007}} The 120-cell is its convex hull. The projection to the left renders only the 120-cell's shortest chord, its 1200 edges. The projection above also renders only one of the 120-cell's 30 chords, the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. The 120-cell itself (the convex hull) is invisible in this view, as its edges are not rendered.
|}
[[120-cell#Geometry|The 120-cell is the maximally complex regular 4-polytope]], containing inscribed instances of every regular 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-polytope, except the regular polygons of more than {15} sides.
The 120-cell is the convex hull of a regular [[120-cell#Relationships among interior polytopes|compound of each of the 6 regular convex 4-polytopes]]. They are the [[5-cell|5-point (5-cell) 4-simplex]], the [[16-cell|8-point (16-cell) 4-orthoplex]], the [[W:Tesseract|16-point (8-cell) tesseract]], the [[24-cell|24-point (24-cell)]], the [[600-cell|120-point (600-cell)]], and the [[120-cell|600-point (120-cell)]]. The 120-cell is the convex hull of a compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells, of 75 disjoint 16-cells, of 25 disjoint 24-cells, and of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
The 120-cell contains an even larger inventory of irregular polytopes, created by the intersection of multiple instances of these component regular 4-polytopes. Many are quite unexpected, because they do not occur as components of any regular polytope smaller than the 120-cell. As just one example among the [[120-cell#Concentric hulls|sections of the 120-cell]], there is an irregular 24-point polyhedron with 16 triangle faces and 4 nonagon {9} faces.{{Sfn|Moxness|}}
Most renderings of the 120-cell, like the rotating projection here, only illustrate its outer surface, which is a honeycomb of face-bonded dodecahedral cells. Only the objects in its 3-dimensional surface are rendered, namely the 120 dodecahedra, their pentagon faces, and their edges. Although the 120-cell has chords of 30 distinct lengths, in this kind of simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges (its shortest chord) are shown. Its 29 interior chords, the edges of objects in the interior of the 120-cell, are not rendered, so interior objects are not visible at all.
Visualizing the complete interior of the 600-vertex 120-cell in a single image is impractical because of its complexity. Only four 120-cell edges are incident at each vertex, but [[120-cell#Chords|600 chords (of all 30 lengths)]] are incident at ''each'' vertex.
== Compounds in the 120-cell ==
The 8-point (16-cell), not the 5-point (5-cell), is the smallest building block; it compounds to every larger regular 4-polytope. The 5-point (5-cell) does compound to the 600-point (120-cell), but it does not fit into any smaller regular 4-polytope.
The 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 2 in the 16-point (8-cell), and by 3 in the 24-point (24-cell). The 16-point (8-cell) compounds in the 24-point (24-cell) by 3 non-disjoint instances of itself, with each of the 24 vertices shared by two 16-point (8-cells). The 24-point (24-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell), and the 120-point (600-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell).
The 24-point (24-cell) also compounds by <math>5^2</math> non-disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell); it compounds in 5 disjoint instances of itself, 10 (not 5) different ways. Whichever set of 5 disjoint 24-point (24-cells) are assembled, the resulting 120-point (600-cell) contains 25 distinct 24-point (24-cells), not just 5 (or 10). This implies that 15 disjoint 8-point (16-cells) will construct a 120-point (600-cell), which will contain 75 distinct 8-point (16-cells).
The 600-point (120-cell) is 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), just 2 different ways (not 5 or 10 ways), so it is 10 distinct 120-point (600-cells). This implies that the 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 3 times <math>5^2</math> (75) disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell), which contains <math>3^2</math> times <math>5^2</math> (225) distinct instances of the 24-point (24-cell), and <math>3^3</math> times <math>5^2</math> (675) distinct instances of the 8-point (16-cell).
These facts were discovered painstakingly by various researchers, and no one has found a general rule governing subsumption relations among regular polytopes. The reasons for some of their numeric incidence relations are far from obvious. [[W:Pieter Hendrik Schoute|Schoute]] was the first to see that the 120-point (600-cell) is a compound of 5 24-point (24-cells) ''10 different ways'', and after he saw it a hundred years lapsed until Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne proved his result, and showed why.{{Sfn|Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne|2020|loc=''The geometry of H4 polytopes''}}
So much for the compounds of 16-cells. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. That stellated compound (without its convex hull of 120-cell edges) is the [[w:Great_grand_stellated_120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] illustrated above, the final regular [[W:Stellation|stellation]] of the 120-cell, and the only [[W:Schläfli-Hess polychoron|regular star 4-polytope]] to have the 120-cell for its convex hull. The edges of the great grand stellated 120-cell are <math>\phi^6</math> as long as those of its 120-cell [[W:List of polyhedral stellations#Stellation process|stellation core]] deep inside.
The compound of 120 disjoint 5-point (5-cells) can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point (600-cell), expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell, by adding 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells): a 120-cell.
== Thirty distinguished distances ==
The 30 numbers listed in the table are all-important in Euclidean geometry. A case can be made on symmetry grounds that their squares are the 30 most important numbers between 0 and 4. The 30 rows of the table are the 30 distinct [[120-cell#Geodesic rectangles|chord lengths of the unit-radius 120-cell]], the largest regular convex 4-polytope. Since the 120-cell subsumes all smaller regular polytopes, its 30 chords are the complete chord set of all the regular polytopes that can be constructed in the first four dimensions of Euclidean space, except for regular polygons of more than 15 sides.
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;text-align:center"
!rowspan=2|<math>c_t</math>
!rowspan=2|arc
!rowspan=2|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{n}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|<math>\left\{p\right\}</math>
!rowspan=2|<small><math>m\left\{\frac{k}{d}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|Steinbach roots
!colspan=7|Chord lengths of the unit 120-cell
|-
!colspan=5|unit-radius length <math>c_t</math>
!colspan=2|unit-edge length <math>c_t/c_1</math><br>in 120-cell of radius <math>c_8=\sqrt{2}\phi^2</math>
|-
|<small><math>c_{1,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>15.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{4,1}-c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.270091</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^4}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.072949}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>25.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{15\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(c_{18,1}-c_{4,1}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{3-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.437016</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.190983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{3,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>36{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{10\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>3 \left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>0.618034</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.381966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.28825</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>41.4{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.707107</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{5,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>44.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{\frac{15}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.756934</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.572949}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.80252</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{6,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>49.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{17}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.831254</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5}}{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.690983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.07768</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{7,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>56.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.93913</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.881966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.47709</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>60{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.70246</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{9,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>66.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{2 \phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.09132</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.04057</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{10,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>69.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2 \sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.14412</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi }{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>4.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{11,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>72{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{6}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.17557</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.38197}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \sqrt{3-\phi } \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.3525</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>75.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{24}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.22474</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.53457</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{13,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>81.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.30038</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.8146</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{14,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>84.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi } c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{1+\sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.345</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi }}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5} \phi }{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.9798</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{15,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>90.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.41421</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{16,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>95.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{29}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.4802</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.48037</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{17,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>98.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{31}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.51954</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(7+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.62605</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{18,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>104.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{8}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.58114</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{5} \sqrt{\phi ^4}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{19,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>108.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{3,1}+c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>5.9907</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{20,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>110.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.64042</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.07359</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{21,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>113.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{19}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.67601</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\chi }{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.20537</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{22,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>120{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{10}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.73205</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{6} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.41285</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{23,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>124.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{41}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }+\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.7658</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.11803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.53779</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{24,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>130.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.81907</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\sqrt{5}}{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.73503</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{25,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>135.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.85123</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi ^2}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^4}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.42705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^4</math></small>
|<small><math>6.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{26,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>138.6{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{12}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.87083</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{7} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.92667</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{27,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>144{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{12}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{5}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.90211</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\phi +2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{2 \phi +4}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.0425</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{28,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>154.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.95167</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.22598</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{29,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>164.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{14}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.98168</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3 \phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.92705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>7.33708</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{30,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>180{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{15}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>7.40492</math></small>
|-
|rowspan=4 colspan=6|
|rowspan=4 colspan=4|
<small><math>\phi</math></small> is the golden ratio:<br>
<small><math>\phi ^2-\phi -1=0</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }+1=\phi</math></small>, and: <small><math>\phi+1=\phi^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }::1::\phi ::\phi ^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>1/\phi</math></small> and <small><math>\phi</math></small> are the golden sections of <small><math>\sqrt{5}</math></small>:<br>
<small><math>\phi +\frac{1}{\phi }=\sqrt{5}</math></small>
|colspan=2|<small><math>\phi = (\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>1.618034</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\chi = (3\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = (3\sqrt{5} - 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = 11/\chi = 22/(3\sqrt{5} + 1)</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|}
...
== The 8-point regular polytopes ==
In 2-space we have the regular 8-point octagon, in 3-space the regular 8-point cube, and in 4-space the regular 8-point [[16-cell]].
A planar octagon with rigid edges of unit length has chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.84776,r_3=1+\sqrt{2} \approx 2.41421,r_4=\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{8}} \approx 2.61313</math>
The chord ratio <math>r_3=1+\sqrt{2}</math> is a geometrical proportion, the [[W:Silver ratio|silver ratio]]. Fontaine and Hurley's procedure for obtaining the reciprocal of a chord tells us that:
:<math>r_3-r_1-r_1=1/r_3 \approx 0.41421</math>
Note that <math>1/r_3=\sqrt{2}-1=r_3-2</math>.
If we embed this planar octagon in 3-space, we can make it skew, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from three others instead of two others, so we obtain a unit-edge cube with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1, r_2=\sqrt{2}, r_3=\sqrt{3}, r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
If we embed this cube in 4-space, we can skew it some more, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from six others instead of three others, so we obtain a unit-edge 4-polytope with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=1,r_3=1,r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
All of its chords except its long diameters are the same unit length as its edge. In fact they are its 24 edges, and it is a 16-cell of radius <small><math>1/\sqrt{2}</math></small>.
[[File:octagon16cell.png|thumb|Orthogonal projection of a regular 16-cell to the [[16-cell#Projections|B<sub>4</sub> Coxeter plane]]. Only its edges are shown; its long diameter chords are not drawn. All 24 edges are the same length. Only the edges of the two disjoint squares lie parallel to the projection plane, in completely orthogonal central planes.]]
The [[16-cell]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {3,3,4}. It has 8 vertices, 24 edges, 32 equilateral triangle faces, and 16 regular tetrahedron cells. It is the [[16-cell#Octahedral dipyramid|four-dimensional analogue of the octahedron]], and each of its four orthogonal central hyperplanes is an octahedron.
The only planar regular polygons found in the 16-cell are face triangles and central plane squares, but the 16-cell also contains a regular skew octagon, its [[W:Petrie polygon|Petrie polygon]]. The chords of this regular octagon, which lies skew in 4-space, are those given above for the 16-cell, as opposed to those for the cube or the regular octagon in the plane. The 16-cell has 6 such Petrie octagons, which share the same 8 vertices but have distinct sets of 8 edges each.
The regular octad has higher symmetry in 4-space than it does in 2-space. The 16-cell is the 4-orthoplex, the simplest regular 4-polytope after the [[5-cell|4-simplex]]. All the larger regular 4-polytopes, including the 120-cell, are compounds of the 16-cell. The regular octagon exhibits this high symmetry only when embedded in 4-space at the vertices of the 16-cell.
The 16-cell constitutes an [[W:Orthonormal basis|orthonormal basis]] for the choice of a 4-dimensional Cartesian reference frame, because its vertices define four orthogonal axes. The eight vertices of a unit-radius 16-cell are (±1, 0, 0, 0), (0, ±1, 0, 0), (0, 0, ±1, 0), (0, 0, 0, ±1). All vertices are connected by <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges except opposite pairs. In this convenient unit-radius 4-coordinate system, the planar octagon we started with had chords of length:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{2},r_2=\sqrt{2(2+\sqrt{2})} \approx 2.61313,r_3=2+\sqrt{2} \approx 3.41421,r_4=2 \sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 3.69552</math>
none of which chords occur in a 16-cell or 120-cell except <math>r_1=\sqrt{2}</math>. Note that the radius of this octagon is:
:<math>\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} = r_2/\sqrt{2}=\sqrt{r_3} \approx 1.84776</math>
which was <math>r_2</math> in our original unit-edge octagon.
In the unit-radius 120-cell, the great square edge chord <math>c_{15} = \sqrt{2}</math> occurs in 675 distinct (75 disjoint) 16-cells. The vertex coordinates of each 16-cell form 6 central squares lying in 6 pairwise [[W:Orthogonal|orthogonal]] coordinate planes. Great squares in ''opposite'' planes that do not share an axis (e.g. in the ''xy'' and ''wz'' planes) are completely disjoint (they do not intersect at any vertices). These planes are [[W:Completely orthogonal|completely orthogonal]].{{Efn|name=Six orthogonal planes of the Cartesian basis}}
[[W:Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space|Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space]] can be seen as the composition of two 2-dimensional rotations in completely orthogonal planes. The general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation in pairs of completely orthogonal planes. Two completely orthogonal planes are called invariant planes of the rotation when all points in the plane rotate on circles that remain in the plane, even as the whole plane tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) into another plane. The two completely orthogonal rotations of each plane (like a wheel, and like a coin flipping) are simultaneous but independent, in that they are not geometrically constrained to turn at the same rate. However, the most circular kind of rotation (as opposed to an elliptical double rotation of a rigid spherical object) occurs when the invariant planes do rotate through the same angle in the same time interval. Such equi-angled double rotations are called [[w:SO(4)#Isoclinic_rotations|isoclinic]], also [[w:William_Kingdon_Clifford|Clifford]] displacements.
The 16-cell is the simplest possible frame in which to [[16-cell#Rotations|observe 4-dimensional rotations]] because its characteristic isoclinic rotations feature a single pair of invariant rotation planes. In the 16-cell an isoclinic rotation by 90° in any pair of invariant completely orthogonal square central planes takes every square central plane to its completely orthogonal square central plane in a twisting displacment, as they tilt sideways 90° into each other's plane while rotating 90° internally. All the vertices move at once on separate circular [[w:Geodesic|geodesics]], displaced 90° in 8 orthogonal directions, and the rigid 16-cell assumes a new orientation in 4-space. When the 90° isoclinic rotation is continued in the same rotational direction through an additional 90°, each vertex is again displaced 90°, but from the new orientation in a direction orthogonal to its first 90° displacement. After 360° of rotation each vertex reaches its antipodal position.
The trajectory of each vertex over each 90° isoclinic rotational displacement is a one-eighth segment of its geodesic orbit. Its entire orbit traces a circular helix in 4-space, and also traces a great circle twice in one of the two moving invariant rotation planes. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions just once and returns to its original position, and the 16-cell returns to its original orientation.
== Hypercubes ==
The long diameter of the unit-edge [[W:Hypercube|hypercube]] of dimension <small><math>n</math></small> is <small><math>\sqrt{n}</math></small>, so the unit-edge [[w:Tesseract|4-hypercube, the 16-point (8-cell) tesseract,]] has chords:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{1},r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3=\sqrt{3},r_4=\sqrt{4}</math>
Uniquely in its 4-dimensional case, the hypercube's edge length equals its radius, like the hexagon. We call such polytopes ''radially equilateral'', because they can be constructed from equilateral triangles which meet at their center, each contributing two radii and an edge. The cuboctahedron and the 24-cell are also radially equilateral.
The [[W:Tesseract|tesseract]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {4,3,3}. It has 16 vertices, 32 edges, 24 square faces, and 8 cube cells. It is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube.
The tesseract is the [[W:Dual polytope|dual polytope]] of the 16-cell. They have the same Petrie polygon, the regular octagon, but the tesseract contains 2 disjoint instances and 4 distinct instances of the skew octagon. We can construct the tesseract the way we constructed the 16-cell, by skewing a planar octagon's edges so they become edges of the 4-polytope. Because the tesseract has 16 vertices we will need two planar octagons, and to start we must embedded them in 4-space as completely orthogonal planes that intersect at only one point, their common center. Because the tesseract is radially equilateral (unlike the 16-cell), to build a unit-radius tesseract we start with our original octagon of unit-edge length, rather than the octagon of edge length <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> that we needed to build the unit-radius 16-cell.
For our tesseract construction we skew each planar octagon into a cube, so we have a compound of two completely orthogonal cubes. Provided the planes were completely orthogonal in 4-space and we skewed them both the same way, the 16 vertices will be the vertices of a tesseract with half of its 32 edges missing.
The 16-point tesseract is the convex hull of a compound of two 8-point 16-cells, in exact dimensional analogy to the way the 8-point cube is the convex hull of a [[W:Stellated octahedron|compound of two regular 4-point tetrahedra]]. The [[W:Demihypercube|demihypercubes]] occupy alternate vertices of the hypercubes. The diagonals of the square faces of the unit-radius tesseract are the <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges of two unit-radius 16-cells, which are also the edges of the square central planes.
Because the tesseract contains two 16-cells in alternate positions it has two sets of 6 orthogonal square central planes. Two angles are required to specify the relationship between two planes in 4-space. Pairs of planes within each 16-cell are 90° apart in one angle, and either 0° or 90° apart in the other angle. They are 90° apart in both angles if and only if they are completely orthogonal planes, 90° apart by isoclinic rotation, with no vertices in common and their corresponding vertices 180° apart. Otherwise they are 0° apart in one of the angles, 90° apart by simple rotation with their corresponding vertices 90° apart, and they intersect in one axis and lie in a common 3-dimensional hyperplane.{{Efn|A double rotation in which one of the two angles of rotation is 0°, so that one of the completely orthogonal invariant planes does not rotate, is called a simple rotation. Ordinary rotations observed in a 3-dimensional space are simple rotations.}}
A pair of square central planes from alternate 16-cells are 60° apart by isoclinic rotation, with their corresponding vertices 120° apart. The planes are not orthogonal or parallel, so they intersect in a line somewhere, but they have no vertices in common, they have no 3-dimensional hyperplane in common, and they cannot reach each other by simple rotation. Such pairs of objects are called [[W:Clifford parallel|Clifford parallel]] because all their corresponding pairs of vertices are the same distance apart, although they are not parallel in the usual sense, because they have a common center. Not only the alternate 16-cells' corresponding square central planes, but also the 16-cells themselves, are Clifford parallel objects.
We can rotate the tesseract isoclinically the way we rotated the 16-cell, by 90° in two completely orthogonal invariant square central planes, with the same effect on both alternate 16-cells. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation in invariant square central planes each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions of its 16-cell just once and returns to its original position, but it does not visit the vertex positions of the other 16-cell. The skew octagon geodesic orbits of the 16 vertices are disjoint circular helixes, and those 16 circular helixes are Clifford parallel objects.
== The 24-cell ==
In 2-space we have the radially equilateral 6-point hexagon. In 3-space we have the radially equilateral 12-point cuboctahedron, with 4 hexagonal central planes. In 4-space we have the radially equilateral 24-point 24-cell, with 4 cuboctahedral central hyperplanes and 16 hexagonal central planes.
Great hexagons are a rounder choice than great squares for the invariant rotation planes in which to rotate a 4-polytope isoclinically. The complete hexagonal isoclinic revolution requires 720° like the square isoclinic revolution, but it is completed in 6 chordal steps of 120° each rather than 8 chordal steps of 90° each.
...
== The 600-cell ==
...
== Finally the 120-cell ==
...
== Conclusions ==
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery is more than a formula for the reciprocal of a regular ''n''-polygon diagonal. It also yields the discrete sequence of isocline chords of the distinct isoclinic rotation characteristic of a ''d''-dimensional regular polytope. The characteristic rotational chord sequence of the ''d''-polytope can be represented geometrically in two dimensions on a distinct star polygon, but it lies on a geodesic circle through ''d''-dimensional space. Fontaine and Hurley discovered the geodesic topology of polytopes generally. Their procedure will reveal the geodesics of arbitrary non-uniform polytopes, since it can be applied to a polytope of any dimensionality and irregularity, by first fitting the polytope to the smallest regular polygon whose chords include its chords.
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery of a chordal formula for isoclinic rotations closes the circuit on Kappraff and Adamson's discovery of a rotational connection between dynamical systems, Steinbach's golden fields, and Coxeter's Euclidean geometry of ''n'' dimensions. Application of the Fontaine and Hurley procedure in higher-dimensional spaces demonstrates why the connection exists: because polytope sequences generally, from Steinbach's golden polygon chord sequences, to chord sequences in isoclinic rotation helixes, to subsumption relations in the sequence of regular 4-polytopes, arise as expressions of the reflections and rotations of distinct Coxeter symmetry groups, when those various groups interact.
== Appendix: Sequence of regular 4-polytopes ==
{{Regular convex 4-polytopes|wiki=W:|columns=7}}
== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=1997 | title=Golden fields: A case for the Heptagon | journal=Mathematics Magazine | volume=70 | issue=Feb 1997 | pages=22–31 | doi=10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996494 | jstor=2691048 | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|1997}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=2000 | title=Sections Beyond Golden| journal=Bridges: Mathematical Connections in Art, Music and Science | issue=2000 | pages=35-44 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2000/bridges2000-35.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|2000}}}}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Jablan | first2=Slavik | last3=Adamson | first3=Gary | last4=Sazdanovich | first4=Radmila | year=2004 | title=Golden Fields, Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, and Chaotic Matrices | journal=Forma | volume=19 | pages=367-387 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2005/bridges2005-369.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff, Jablan, Adamson & Sazdanovich|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Adamson | first2=Gary | year=2004 | title=Polygons and Chaos | journal=Dynamical Systems and Geometric Theories | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2001/bridges2001-67.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff & Adamson|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Fontaine | first1=Anne | last2=Hurley | first2=Susan | year=2006 | title=Proof by Picture: Products and Reciprocals of Diagonal Length Ratios in the Regular Polygon | journal=Forum Geometricorum | volume=6 | pages=97-101 | url=https://scispace.com/pdf/proof-by-picture-products-and-reciprocals-of-diagonal-length-1aian8mgp9.pdf }}
{{Refend}}
qqx55ku6zofdm6lwhdbjs1urxmbzpac
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/* The 8-point regular polytopes */
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text/x-wiki
{{align|center|David Brooks Christie}}
{{align|center|dc@samizdat.org}}
{{align|center|Draft in progress}}
{{align|center|January 2026 - April 2026}}
<blockquote>Steinbach discovered the formula for the ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. Fontaine and Hurley extended this result, discovering a formula for the reciprocal of a regular polygon chord derived geometrically from the chord's star polygon. We observe that these findings in plane geometry apply more generally, to polytopes of any dimensionality. Fontaine and Hurley's geometric procedure for finding the reciprocals of the chords of a regular polygon from their star polygons also finds the rotational geodesics of any polytope of any dimensionality.</blockquote>
== Introduction ==
Steinbach discovered the Diagonal Product Formula and the Golden Fields family of ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. He showed how this family extends beyond the pentagon {5} with its well-known golden bisection proportional to 𝜙, finding that the heptagon {7} has an analogous trisection, the nonagon {9} has an analogous quadrasection, and the hendecagon {11} has an analogous pentasection, an extended family of golden proportions with quasiperiodic properties.
Kappraff and Adamson extended these findings in plane geometry to a theory of Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, showing that the Golden Fields not only do not end with the hendecagon, they form an infinite number of periodic trajectories when operated on by the Mandelbrot operator. They found a relation between the edges of star polygons and dynamical systems in the state of chaos, revealing a connection between chaos theory, number, and rotations in Coxeter Euclidean geometry.
Fontaine and Hurley examined Steinbach's finding that the length of each chord of a regular polygon is both the product of two chords and the sum of a set of smaller chords, so that in rotations to add is to multiply. They illustrated Steinbach's sets of additive chords lying parallel to each other in the plane (pointing in the same direction), and by applying Steinbach's formula more generally they found another summation relation of signed parallel chords (pointing in opposite directions) which relates each chord length to its reciprocal, and relates the summation to a distinct star polygon rotation.
We examine these remarkable findings (which stem from study of the chords of humble regular polygons) in higher-dimensional spaces, specifically in the chords, polygons and rotations of the [[120-cell]], the largest four-dimensional regular convex polytope.
== Visualizing the 120-cell ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" width="400"
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:120-cell.gif|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point 120-cell <small><math>\{5,3,3\}</math></small> performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]].{{Sfn|Hise|2011|loc=File:120-cell.gif|ps=; "Created by Jason Hise with Maya and Macromedia Fireworks. A 3D projection of a 120-cell performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]]."}} In this simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges are shown; its 29 interior chords are not rendered. Therefore even though it is translucent, only its outer surface is visible. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 5-cells, 16-cells, 8-cells, 24-cells, 600-cells and its much larger inventory of polyhedra, are completely invisible in this view, as none of their edges are rendered at all.
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point [[W:Great grand stellated 120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] <small><math>\{\tfrac{5}{2},3,3\}</math></small>.{{Sfn|Ruen: Great grand stellated 120-cell|2007}} The 120-cell is its convex hull. The projection to the left renders only the 120-cell's shortest chord, its 1200 edges. The projection above also renders only one of the 120-cell's 30 chords, the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. The 120-cell itself (the convex hull) is invisible in this view, as its edges are not rendered.
|}
[[120-cell#Geometry|The 120-cell is the maximally complex regular 4-polytope]], containing inscribed instances of every regular 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-polytope, except the regular polygons of more than {15} sides.
The 120-cell is the convex hull of a regular [[120-cell#Relationships among interior polytopes|compound of each of the 6 regular convex 4-polytopes]]. They are the [[5-cell|5-point (5-cell) 4-simplex]], the [[16-cell|8-point (16-cell) 4-orthoplex]], the [[W:Tesseract|16-point (8-cell) tesseract]], the [[24-cell|24-point (24-cell)]], the [[600-cell|120-point (600-cell)]], and the [[120-cell|600-point (120-cell)]]. The 120-cell is the convex hull of a compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells, of 75 disjoint 16-cells, of 25 disjoint 24-cells, and of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
The 120-cell contains an even larger inventory of irregular polytopes, created by the intersection of multiple instances of these component regular 4-polytopes. Many are quite unexpected, because they do not occur as components of any regular polytope smaller than the 120-cell. As just one example among the [[120-cell#Concentric hulls|sections of the 120-cell]], there is an irregular 24-point polyhedron with 16 triangle faces and 4 nonagon {9} faces.{{Sfn|Moxness|}}
Most renderings of the 120-cell, like the rotating projection here, only illustrate its outer surface, which is a honeycomb of face-bonded dodecahedral cells. Only the objects in its 3-dimensional surface are rendered, namely the 120 dodecahedra, their pentagon faces, and their edges. Although the 120-cell has chords of 30 distinct lengths, in this kind of simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges (its shortest chord) are shown. Its 29 interior chords, the edges of objects in the interior of the 120-cell, are not rendered, so interior objects are not visible at all.
Visualizing the complete interior of the 600-vertex 120-cell in a single image is impractical because of its complexity. Only four 120-cell edges are incident at each vertex, but [[120-cell#Chords|600 chords (of all 30 lengths)]] are incident at ''each'' vertex.
== Compounds in the 120-cell ==
The 8-point (16-cell), not the 5-point (5-cell), is the smallest building block; it compounds to every larger regular 4-polytope. The 5-point (5-cell) does compound to the 600-point (120-cell), but it does not fit into any smaller regular 4-polytope.
The 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 2 in the 16-point (8-cell), and by 3 in the 24-point (24-cell). The 16-point (8-cell) compounds in the 24-point (24-cell) by 3 non-disjoint instances of itself, with each of the 24 vertices shared by two 16-point (8-cells). The 24-point (24-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell), and the 120-point (600-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell).
The 24-point (24-cell) also compounds by <math>5^2</math> non-disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell); it compounds in 5 disjoint instances of itself, 10 (not 5) different ways. Whichever set of 5 disjoint 24-point (24-cells) are assembled, the resulting 120-point (600-cell) contains 25 distinct 24-point (24-cells), not just 5 (or 10). This implies that 15 disjoint 8-point (16-cells) will construct a 120-point (600-cell), which will contain 75 distinct 8-point (16-cells).
The 600-point (120-cell) is 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), just 2 different ways (not 5 or 10 ways), so it is 10 distinct 120-point (600-cells). This implies that the 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 3 times <math>5^2</math> (75) disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell), which contains <math>3^2</math> times <math>5^2</math> (225) distinct instances of the 24-point (24-cell), and <math>3^3</math> times <math>5^2</math> (675) distinct instances of the 8-point (16-cell).
These facts were discovered painstakingly by various researchers, and no one has found a general rule governing subsumption relations among regular polytopes. The reasons for some of their numeric incidence relations are far from obvious. [[W:Pieter Hendrik Schoute|Schoute]] was the first to see that the 120-point (600-cell) is a compound of 5 24-point (24-cells) ''10 different ways'', and after he saw it a hundred years lapsed until Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne proved his result, and showed why.{{Sfn|Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne|2020|loc=''The geometry of H4 polytopes''}}
So much for the compounds of 16-cells. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. That stellated compound (without its convex hull of 120-cell edges) is the [[w:Great_grand_stellated_120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] illustrated above, the final regular [[W:Stellation|stellation]] of the 120-cell, and the only [[W:Schläfli-Hess polychoron|regular star 4-polytope]] to have the 120-cell for its convex hull. The edges of the great grand stellated 120-cell are <math>\phi^6</math> as long as those of its 120-cell [[W:List of polyhedral stellations#Stellation process|stellation core]] deep inside.
The compound of 120 disjoint 5-point (5-cells) can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point (600-cell), expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell, by adding 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells): a 120-cell.
== Thirty distinguished distances ==
The 30 numbers listed in the table are all-important in Euclidean geometry. A case can be made on symmetry grounds that their squares are the 30 most important numbers between 0 and 4. The 30 rows of the table are the 30 distinct [[120-cell#Geodesic rectangles|chord lengths of the unit-radius 120-cell]], the largest regular convex 4-polytope. Since the 120-cell subsumes all smaller regular polytopes, its 30 chords are the complete chord set of all the regular polytopes that can be constructed in the first four dimensions of Euclidean space, except for regular polygons of more than 15 sides.
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;text-align:center"
!rowspan=2|<math>c_t</math>
!rowspan=2|arc
!rowspan=2|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{n}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|<math>\left\{p\right\}</math>
!rowspan=2|<small><math>m\left\{\frac{k}{d}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|Steinbach roots
!colspan=7|Chord lengths of the unit 120-cell
|-
!colspan=5|unit-radius length <math>c_t</math>
!colspan=2|unit-edge length <math>c_t/c_1</math><br>in 120-cell of radius <math>c_8=\sqrt{2}\phi^2</math>
|-
|<small><math>c_{1,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>15.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{4,1}-c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.270091</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^4}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.072949}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>25.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{15\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(c_{18,1}-c_{4,1}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{3-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.437016</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.190983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{3,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>36{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{10\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>3 \left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>0.618034</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.381966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.28825</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>41.4{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.707107</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{5,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>44.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{\frac{15}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.756934</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.572949}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.80252</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{6,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>49.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{17}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.831254</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5}}{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.690983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.07768</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{7,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>56.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.93913</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.881966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.47709</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>60{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.70246</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{9,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>66.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{2 \phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.09132</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.04057</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{10,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>69.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2 \sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.14412</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi }{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>4.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{11,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>72{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{6}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.17557</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.38197}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \sqrt{3-\phi } \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.3525</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>75.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{24}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.22474</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.53457</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{13,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>81.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.30038</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.8146</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{14,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>84.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi } c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{1+\sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.345</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi }}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5} \phi }{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.9798</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{15,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>90.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.41421</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{16,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>95.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{29}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.4802</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.48037</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{17,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>98.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{31}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.51954</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(7+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.62605</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{18,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>104.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{8}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.58114</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{5} \sqrt{\phi ^4}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{19,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>108.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{3,1}+c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>5.9907</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{20,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>110.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.64042</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.07359</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{21,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>113.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{19}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.67601</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\chi }{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.20537</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{22,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>120{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{10}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.73205</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{6} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.41285</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{23,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>124.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{41}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }+\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.7658</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.11803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.53779</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{24,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>130.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.81907</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\sqrt{5}}{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.73503</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{25,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>135.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.85123</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi ^2}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^4}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.42705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^4</math></small>
|<small><math>6.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{26,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>138.6{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{12}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.87083</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{7} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.92667</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{27,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>144{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{12}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{5}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.90211</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\phi +2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{2 \phi +4}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.0425</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{28,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>154.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.95167</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.22598</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{29,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>164.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{14}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.98168</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3 \phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.92705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>7.33708</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{30,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>180{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{15}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>7.40492</math></small>
|-
|rowspan=4 colspan=6|
|rowspan=4 colspan=4|
<small><math>\phi</math></small> is the golden ratio:<br>
<small><math>\phi ^2-\phi -1=0</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }+1=\phi</math></small>, and: <small><math>\phi+1=\phi^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }::1::\phi ::\phi ^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>1/\phi</math></small> and <small><math>\phi</math></small> are the golden sections of <small><math>\sqrt{5}</math></small>:<br>
<small><math>\phi +\frac{1}{\phi }=\sqrt{5}</math></small>
|colspan=2|<small><math>\phi = (\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>1.618034</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\chi = (3\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = (3\sqrt{5} - 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = 11/\chi = 22/(3\sqrt{5} + 1)</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|}
...
== The 8-point regular polytopes ==
In 2-space we have the regular 8-point octagon, in 3-space the regular 8-point cube, and in 4-space the regular 8-point [[16-cell]].
A planar octagon with edges of unit length has chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.84776,r_3=1+\sqrt{2} \approx 2.41421,r_4=\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{8}} \approx 2.61313</math>
The chord ratio <math>r_3=1+\sqrt{2}</math> is a geometrical proportion, the [[W:Silver ratio|silver ratio]]. Fontaine and Hurley's procedure for obtaining the reciprocal of a chord tells us that:
:<math>r_3-r_1-r_1=1/r_3 \approx 0.41421</math>
Note that <math>1/r_3=\sqrt{2}-1=r_3-2</math>.
If we embed this planar octagon in 3-space, we can make it skew, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from three others instead of two others, so we obtain a unit-edge cube with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1, r_2=\sqrt{2}, r_3=\sqrt{3}, r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
If we embed this cube in 4-space, we can skew it some more, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from six others instead of three others, so we obtain a unit-edge 4-polytope with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=1,r_3=1,r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
All of its chords except its long diameters are the same unit length as its edge. In fact they are its 24 edges, and it is a 16-cell of radius <small><math>1/\sqrt{2}</math></small>.
[[File:octagon16cell.png|thumb|Orthogonal projection of a regular 16-cell to the [[16-cell#Projections|B<sub>4</sub> Coxeter plane]]. Only its edges are shown; its long diameter chords are not drawn. All 24 edges are the same length. Only the edges of the two disjoint squares lie parallel to the projection plane, in completely orthogonal central planes.]]
The [[16-cell]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {3,3,4}. It has 8 vertices, 24 edges, 32 equilateral triangle faces, and 16 regular tetrahedron cells. It is the [[16-cell#Octahedral dipyramid|four-dimensional analogue of the octahedron]], and each of its four orthogonal central hyperplanes is an octahedron.
The only planar regular polygons found in the 16-cell are face triangles and central plane squares, but the 16-cell also contains a regular skew octagon, its [[W:Petrie polygon|Petrie polygon]]. The chords of this regular octagon, which lies skew in 4-space, are those given above for the 16-cell, as opposed to those for the cube or the regular octagon in the plane. The 16-cell has 6 such Petrie octagons, which share the same 8 vertices but have distinct sets of 8 edges each.
The regular octad has higher symmetry in 4-space than it does in 2-space. The 16-cell is the 4-orthoplex, the simplest regular 4-polytope after the [[5-cell|4-simplex]]. All the larger regular 4-polytopes, including the 120-cell, are compounds of the 16-cell. The regular octagon exhibits this high symmetry only when embedded in 4-space at the vertices of the 16-cell.
The 16-cell constitutes an [[W:Orthonormal basis|orthonormal basis]] for the choice of a 4-dimensional Cartesian reference frame, because its vertices define four orthogonal axes. The eight vertices of a unit-radius 16-cell are (±1, 0, 0, 0), (0, ±1, 0, 0), (0, 0, ±1, 0), (0, 0, 0, ±1). All vertices are connected by <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges except opposite pairs. Since this unit-radius 4-coordinate system is convenient, let us derive the unit-radius 16-cell by skewing a unit-radius planar octagon, which has chords of length:
:<math>r_1 \approx 0.76537,r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3= \approx 1.84774,r_4=2</math>
so we will need a planar octagon with rigid <math>r_2</math> chords, rather than one with rigid edges. The octagon's <math>r_2</math> chords form two disjoint squares, so our skewing operation
In the unit-radius 120-cell, the great square edge chord <math>c_{15} = \sqrt{2}</math> occurs in 675 distinct (75 disjoint) 16-cells. The vertex coordinates of each 16-cell form 6 central squares lying in 6 pairwise [[W:Orthogonal|orthogonal]] coordinate planes. Great squares in ''opposite'' planes that do not share an axis (e.g. in the ''xy'' and ''wz'' planes) are completely disjoint (they do not intersect at any vertices). These planes are [[W:Completely orthogonal|completely orthogonal]].{{Efn|name=Six orthogonal planes of the Cartesian basis}}
[[W:Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space|Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space]] can be seen as the composition of two 2-dimensional rotations in completely orthogonal planes. The general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation in pairs of completely orthogonal planes. Two completely orthogonal planes are called invariant planes of the rotation when all points in the plane rotate on circles that remain in the plane, even as the whole plane tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) into another plane. The two completely orthogonal rotations of each plane (like a wheel, and like a coin flipping) are simultaneous but independent, in that they are not geometrically constrained to turn at the same rate. However, the most circular kind of rotation (as opposed to an elliptical double rotation of a rigid spherical object) occurs when the invariant planes do rotate through the same angle in the same time interval. Such equi-angled double rotations are called [[w:SO(4)#Isoclinic_rotations|isoclinic]], also [[w:William_Kingdon_Clifford|Clifford]] displacements.
The 16-cell is the simplest possible frame in which to [[16-cell#Rotations|observe 4-dimensional rotations]] because its characteristic isoclinic rotations feature a single pair of invariant rotation planes. In the 16-cell an isoclinic rotation by 90° in any pair of invariant completely orthogonal square central planes takes every square central plane to its completely orthogonal square central plane in a twisting displacment, as they tilt sideways 90° into each other's plane while rotating 90° internally. All the vertices move at once on separate circular [[w:Geodesic|geodesics]], displaced 90° in 8 orthogonal directions, and the rigid 16-cell assumes a new orientation in 4-space. When the 90° isoclinic rotation is continued in the same rotational direction through an additional 90°, each vertex is again displaced 90°, but from the new orientation in a direction orthogonal to its first 90° displacement. After 360° of rotation each vertex reaches its antipodal position.
The trajectory of each vertex over each 90° isoclinic rotational displacement is a one-eighth segment of its geodesic orbit. Its entire orbit traces a circular helix in 4-space, and also traces a great circle twice in one of the two moving invariant rotation planes. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions just once and returns to its original position, and the 16-cell returns to its original orientation.
== Hypercubes ==
The long diameter of the unit-edge [[W:Hypercube|hypercube]] of dimension <small><math>n</math></small> is <small><math>\sqrt{n}</math></small>, so the unit-edge [[w:Tesseract|4-hypercube, the 16-point (8-cell) tesseract,]] has chords:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{1},r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3=\sqrt{3},r_4=\sqrt{4}</math>
Uniquely in its 4-dimensional case, the hypercube's edge length equals its radius, like the hexagon. We call such polytopes ''radially equilateral'', because they can be constructed from equilateral triangles which meet at their center, each contributing two radii and an edge. The cuboctahedron and the 24-cell are also radially equilateral.
The [[W:Tesseract|tesseract]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {4,3,3}. It has 16 vertices, 32 edges, 24 square faces, and 8 cube cells. It is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube.
The tesseract is the [[W:Dual polytope|dual polytope]] of the 16-cell. They have the same Petrie polygon, the regular octagon, but the tesseract contains 2 disjoint instances and 4 distinct instances of the skew octagon. We can construct the tesseract the way we constructed the 16-cell, by skewing a planar octagon's edges so they become edges of the 4-polytope. Because the tesseract has 16 vertices we will need two planar octagons, and to start we must embedded them in 4-space as completely orthogonal planes that intersect at only one point, their common center. Because the tesseract is radially equilateral (unlike the 16-cell), to build a unit-radius tesseract we start with our original octagon of unit-edge length, rather than the octagon of edge length <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> that we needed to build the unit-radius 16-cell.
For our tesseract construction we skew each planar octagon into a cube, so we have a compound of two completely orthogonal cubes. Provided the planes were completely orthogonal in 4-space and we skewed them both the same way, the 16 vertices will be the vertices of a tesseract with half of its 32 edges missing.
The 16-point tesseract is the convex hull of a compound of two 8-point 16-cells, in exact dimensional analogy to the way the 8-point cube is the convex hull of a [[W:Stellated octahedron|compound of two regular 4-point tetrahedra]]. The [[W:Demihypercube|demihypercubes]] occupy alternate vertices of the hypercubes. The diagonals of the square faces of the unit-radius tesseract are the <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges of two unit-radius 16-cells, which are also the edges of the square central planes.
Because the tesseract contains two 16-cells in alternate positions it has two sets of 6 orthogonal square central planes. Two angles are required to specify the relationship between two planes in 4-space. Pairs of planes within each 16-cell are 90° apart in one angle, and either 0° or 90° apart in the other angle. They are 90° apart in both angles if and only if they are completely orthogonal planes, 90° apart by isoclinic rotation, with no vertices in common and their corresponding vertices 180° apart. Otherwise they are 0° apart in one of the angles, 90° apart by simple rotation with their corresponding vertices 90° apart, and they intersect in one axis and lie in a common 3-dimensional hyperplane.{{Efn|A double rotation in which one of the two angles of rotation is 0°, so that one of the completely orthogonal invariant planes does not rotate, is called a simple rotation. Ordinary rotations observed in a 3-dimensional space are simple rotations.}}
A pair of square central planes from alternate 16-cells are 60° apart by isoclinic rotation, with their corresponding vertices 120° apart. The planes are not orthogonal or parallel, so they intersect in a line somewhere, but they have no vertices in common, they have no 3-dimensional hyperplane in common, and they cannot reach each other by simple rotation. Such pairs of objects are called [[W:Clifford parallel|Clifford parallel]] because all their corresponding pairs of vertices are the same distance apart, although they are not parallel in the usual sense, because they have a common center. Not only the alternate 16-cells' corresponding square central planes, but also the 16-cells themselves, are Clifford parallel objects.
We can rotate the tesseract isoclinically the way we rotated the 16-cell, by 90° in two completely orthogonal invariant square central planes, with the same effect on both alternate 16-cells. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation in invariant square central planes each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions of its 16-cell just once and returns to its original position, but it does not visit the vertex positions of the other 16-cell. The skew octagon geodesic orbits of the 16 vertices are disjoint circular helixes, and those 16 circular helixes are Clifford parallel objects.
== The 24-cell ==
In 2-space we have the radially equilateral 6-point hexagon. In 3-space we have the radially equilateral 12-point cuboctahedron, with 4 hexagonal central planes. In 4-space we have the radially equilateral 24-point 24-cell, with 4 cuboctahedral central hyperplanes and 16 hexagonal central planes.
Great hexagons are a rounder choice than great squares for the invariant rotation planes in which to rotate a 4-polytope isoclinically. The complete hexagonal isoclinic revolution requires 720° like the square isoclinic revolution, but it is completed in 6 chordal steps of 120° each rather than 8 chordal steps of 90° each.
...
== The 600-cell ==
...
== Finally the 120-cell ==
...
== Conclusions ==
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery is more than a formula for the reciprocal of a regular ''n''-polygon diagonal. It also yields the discrete sequence of isocline chords of the distinct isoclinic rotation characteristic of a ''d''-dimensional regular polytope. The characteristic rotational chord sequence of the ''d''-polytope can be represented geometrically in two dimensions on a distinct star polygon, but it lies on a geodesic circle through ''d''-dimensional space. Fontaine and Hurley discovered the geodesic topology of polytopes generally. Their procedure will reveal the geodesics of arbitrary non-uniform polytopes, since it can be applied to a polytope of any dimensionality and irregularity, by first fitting the polytope to the smallest regular polygon whose chords include its chords.
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery of a chordal formula for isoclinic rotations closes the circuit on Kappraff and Adamson's discovery of a rotational connection between dynamical systems, Steinbach's golden fields, and Coxeter's Euclidean geometry of ''n'' dimensions. Application of the Fontaine and Hurley procedure in higher-dimensional spaces demonstrates why the connection exists: because polytope sequences generally, from Steinbach's golden polygon chord sequences, to chord sequences in isoclinic rotation helixes, to subsumption relations in the sequence of regular 4-polytopes, arise as expressions of the reflections and rotations of distinct Coxeter symmetry groups, when those various groups interact.
== Appendix: Sequence of regular 4-polytopes ==
{{Regular convex 4-polytopes|wiki=W:|columns=7}}
== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=1997 | title=Golden fields: A case for the Heptagon | journal=Mathematics Magazine | volume=70 | issue=Feb 1997 | pages=22–31 | doi=10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996494 | jstor=2691048 | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|1997}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=2000 | title=Sections Beyond Golden| journal=Bridges: Mathematical Connections in Art, Music and Science | issue=2000 | pages=35-44 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2000/bridges2000-35.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|2000}}}}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Jablan | first2=Slavik | last3=Adamson | first3=Gary | last4=Sazdanovich | first4=Radmila | year=2004 | title=Golden Fields, Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, and Chaotic Matrices | journal=Forma | volume=19 | pages=367-387 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2005/bridges2005-369.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff, Jablan, Adamson & Sazdanovich|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Adamson | first2=Gary | year=2004 | title=Polygons and Chaos | journal=Dynamical Systems and Geometric Theories | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2001/bridges2001-67.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff & Adamson|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Fontaine | first1=Anne | last2=Hurley | first2=Susan | year=2006 | title=Proof by Picture: Products and Reciprocals of Diagonal Length Ratios in the Regular Polygon | journal=Forum Geometricorum | volume=6 | pages=97-101 | url=https://scispace.com/pdf/proof-by-picture-products-and-reciprocals-of-diagonal-length-1aian8mgp9.pdf }}
{{Refend}}
9ucgmccdjnznluli5bx83b7brmhjefl
2808935
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2026-05-13T20:43:37Z
Dc.samizdat
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/* The 8-point regular polytopes */
2808935
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{align|center|David Brooks Christie}}
{{align|center|dc@samizdat.org}}
{{align|center|Draft in progress}}
{{align|center|January 2026 - April 2026}}
<blockquote>Steinbach discovered the formula for the ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. Fontaine and Hurley extended this result, discovering a formula for the reciprocal of a regular polygon chord derived geometrically from the chord's star polygon. We observe that these findings in plane geometry apply more generally, to polytopes of any dimensionality. Fontaine and Hurley's geometric procedure for finding the reciprocals of the chords of a regular polygon from their star polygons also finds the rotational geodesics of any polytope of any dimensionality.</blockquote>
== Introduction ==
Steinbach discovered the Diagonal Product Formula and the Golden Fields family of ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. He showed how this family extends beyond the pentagon {5} with its well-known golden bisection proportional to 𝜙, finding that the heptagon {7} has an analogous trisection, the nonagon {9} has an analogous quadrasection, and the hendecagon {11} has an analogous pentasection, an extended family of golden proportions with quasiperiodic properties.
Kappraff and Adamson extended these findings in plane geometry to a theory of Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, showing that the Golden Fields not only do not end with the hendecagon, they form an infinite number of periodic trajectories when operated on by the Mandelbrot operator. They found a relation between the edges of star polygons and dynamical systems in the state of chaos, revealing a connection between chaos theory, number, and rotations in Coxeter Euclidean geometry.
Fontaine and Hurley examined Steinbach's finding that the length of each chord of a regular polygon is both the product of two chords and the sum of a set of smaller chords, so that in rotations to add is to multiply. They illustrated Steinbach's sets of additive chords lying parallel to each other in the plane (pointing in the same direction), and by applying Steinbach's formula more generally they found another summation relation of signed parallel chords (pointing in opposite directions) which relates each chord length to its reciprocal, and relates the summation to a distinct star polygon rotation.
We examine these remarkable findings (which stem from study of the chords of humble regular polygons) in higher-dimensional spaces, specifically in the chords, polygons and rotations of the [[120-cell]], the largest four-dimensional regular convex polytope.
== Visualizing the 120-cell ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" width="400"
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:120-cell.gif|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point 120-cell <small><math>\{5,3,3\}</math></small> performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]].{{Sfn|Hise|2011|loc=File:120-cell.gif|ps=; "Created by Jason Hise with Maya and Macromedia Fireworks. A 3D projection of a 120-cell performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]]."}} In this simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges are shown; its 29 interior chords are not rendered. Therefore even though it is translucent, only its outer surface is visible. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 5-cells, 16-cells, 8-cells, 24-cells, 600-cells and its much larger inventory of polyhedra, are completely invisible in this view, as none of their edges are rendered at all.
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point [[W:Great grand stellated 120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] <small><math>\{\tfrac{5}{2},3,3\}</math></small>.{{Sfn|Ruen: Great grand stellated 120-cell|2007}} The 120-cell is its convex hull. The projection to the left renders only the 120-cell's shortest chord, its 1200 edges. The projection above also renders only one of the 120-cell's 30 chords, the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. The 120-cell itself (the convex hull) is invisible in this view, as its edges are not rendered.
|}
[[120-cell#Geometry|The 120-cell is the maximally complex regular 4-polytope]], containing inscribed instances of every regular 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-polytope, except the regular polygons of more than {15} sides.
The 120-cell is the convex hull of a regular [[120-cell#Relationships among interior polytopes|compound of each of the 6 regular convex 4-polytopes]]. They are the [[5-cell|5-point (5-cell) 4-simplex]], the [[16-cell|8-point (16-cell) 4-orthoplex]], the [[W:Tesseract|16-point (8-cell) tesseract]], the [[24-cell|24-point (24-cell)]], the [[600-cell|120-point (600-cell)]], and the [[120-cell|600-point (120-cell)]]. The 120-cell is the convex hull of a compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells, of 75 disjoint 16-cells, of 25 disjoint 24-cells, and of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
The 120-cell contains an even larger inventory of irregular polytopes, created by the intersection of multiple instances of these component regular 4-polytopes. Many are quite unexpected, because they do not occur as components of any regular polytope smaller than the 120-cell. As just one example among the [[120-cell#Concentric hulls|sections of the 120-cell]], there is an irregular 24-point polyhedron with 16 triangle faces and 4 nonagon {9} faces.{{Sfn|Moxness|}}
Most renderings of the 120-cell, like the rotating projection here, only illustrate its outer surface, which is a honeycomb of face-bonded dodecahedral cells. Only the objects in its 3-dimensional surface are rendered, namely the 120 dodecahedra, their pentagon faces, and their edges. Although the 120-cell has chords of 30 distinct lengths, in this kind of simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges (its shortest chord) are shown. Its 29 interior chords, the edges of objects in the interior of the 120-cell, are not rendered, so interior objects are not visible at all.
Visualizing the complete interior of the 600-vertex 120-cell in a single image is impractical because of its complexity. Only four 120-cell edges are incident at each vertex, but [[120-cell#Chords|600 chords (of all 30 lengths)]] are incident at ''each'' vertex.
== Compounds in the 120-cell ==
The 8-point (16-cell), not the 5-point (5-cell), is the smallest building block; it compounds to every larger regular 4-polytope. The 5-point (5-cell) does compound to the 600-point (120-cell), but it does not fit into any smaller regular 4-polytope.
The 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 2 in the 16-point (8-cell), and by 3 in the 24-point (24-cell). The 16-point (8-cell) compounds in the 24-point (24-cell) by 3 non-disjoint instances of itself, with each of the 24 vertices shared by two 16-point (8-cells). The 24-point (24-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell), and the 120-point (600-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell).
The 24-point (24-cell) also compounds by <math>5^2</math> non-disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell); it compounds in 5 disjoint instances of itself, 10 (not 5) different ways. Whichever set of 5 disjoint 24-point (24-cells) are assembled, the resulting 120-point (600-cell) contains 25 distinct 24-point (24-cells), not just 5 (or 10). This implies that 15 disjoint 8-point (16-cells) will construct a 120-point (600-cell), which will contain 75 distinct 8-point (16-cells).
The 600-point (120-cell) is 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), just 2 different ways (not 5 or 10 ways), so it is 10 distinct 120-point (600-cells). This implies that the 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 3 times <math>5^2</math> (75) disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell), which contains <math>3^2</math> times <math>5^2</math> (225) distinct instances of the 24-point (24-cell), and <math>3^3</math> times <math>5^2</math> (675) distinct instances of the 8-point (16-cell).
These facts were discovered painstakingly by various researchers, and no one has found a general rule governing subsumption relations among regular polytopes. The reasons for some of their numeric incidence relations are far from obvious. [[W:Pieter Hendrik Schoute|Schoute]] was the first to see that the 120-point (600-cell) is a compound of 5 24-point (24-cells) ''10 different ways'', and after he saw it a hundred years lapsed until Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne proved his result, and showed why.{{Sfn|Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne|2020|loc=''The geometry of H4 polytopes''}}
So much for the compounds of 16-cells. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. That stellated compound (without its convex hull of 120-cell edges) is the [[w:Great_grand_stellated_120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] illustrated above, the final regular [[W:Stellation|stellation]] of the 120-cell, and the only [[W:Schläfli-Hess polychoron|regular star 4-polytope]] to have the 120-cell for its convex hull. The edges of the great grand stellated 120-cell are <math>\phi^6</math> as long as those of its 120-cell [[W:List of polyhedral stellations#Stellation process|stellation core]] deep inside.
The compound of 120 disjoint 5-point (5-cells) can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point (600-cell), expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell, by adding 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells): a 120-cell.
== Thirty distinguished distances ==
The 30 numbers listed in the table are all-important in Euclidean geometry. A case can be made on symmetry grounds that their squares are the 30 most important numbers between 0 and 4. The 30 rows of the table are the 30 distinct [[120-cell#Geodesic rectangles|chord lengths of the unit-radius 120-cell]], the largest regular convex 4-polytope. Since the 120-cell subsumes all smaller regular polytopes, its 30 chords are the complete chord set of all the regular polytopes that can be constructed in the first four dimensions of Euclidean space, except for regular polygons of more than 15 sides.
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;text-align:center"
!rowspan=2|<math>c_t</math>
!rowspan=2|arc
!rowspan=2|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{n}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|<math>\left\{p\right\}</math>
!rowspan=2|<small><math>m\left\{\frac{k}{d}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|Steinbach roots
!colspan=7|Chord lengths of the unit 120-cell
|-
!colspan=5|unit-radius length <math>c_t</math>
!colspan=2|unit-edge length <math>c_t/c_1</math><br>in 120-cell of radius <math>c_8=\sqrt{2}\phi^2</math>
|-
|<small><math>c_{1,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>15.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{4,1}-c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.270091</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^4}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.072949}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>25.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{15\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(c_{18,1}-c_{4,1}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{3-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.437016</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.190983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{3,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>36{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{10\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>3 \left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>0.618034</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.381966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.28825</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>41.4{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.707107</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{5,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>44.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{\frac{15}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.756934</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.572949}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.80252</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{6,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>49.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{17}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.831254</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5}}{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.690983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.07768</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{7,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>56.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.93913</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.881966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.47709</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>60{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.70246</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{9,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>66.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{2 \phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.09132</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.04057</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{10,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>69.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2 \sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.14412</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi }{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>4.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{11,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>72{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{6}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.17557</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.38197}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \sqrt{3-\phi } \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.3525</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>75.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{24}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.22474</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.53457</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{13,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>81.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.30038</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.8146</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{14,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>84.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi } c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{1+\sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.345</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi }}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5} \phi }{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.9798</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{15,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>90.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.41421</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{16,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>95.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{29}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.4802</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.48037</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{17,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>98.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{31}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.51954</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(7+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.62605</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{18,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>104.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{8}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.58114</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{5} \sqrt{\phi ^4}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{19,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>108.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{3,1}+c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>5.9907</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{20,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>110.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.64042</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.07359</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{21,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>113.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{19}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.67601</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\chi }{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.20537</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{22,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>120{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{10}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.73205</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{6} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.41285</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{23,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>124.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{41}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }+\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.7658</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.11803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.53779</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{24,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>130.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.81907</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\sqrt{5}}{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.73503</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{25,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>135.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.85123</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi ^2}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^4}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.42705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^4</math></small>
|<small><math>6.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{26,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>138.6{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{12}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.87083</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{7} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.92667</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{27,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>144{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{12}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{5}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.90211</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\phi +2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{2 \phi +4}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.0425</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{28,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>154.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.95167</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.22598</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{29,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>164.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{14}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.98168</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3 \phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.92705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>7.33708</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{30,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>180{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{15}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>7.40492</math></small>
|-
|rowspan=4 colspan=6|
|rowspan=4 colspan=4|
<small><math>\phi</math></small> is the golden ratio:<br>
<small><math>\phi ^2-\phi -1=0</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }+1=\phi</math></small>, and: <small><math>\phi+1=\phi^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }::1::\phi ::\phi ^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>1/\phi</math></small> and <small><math>\phi</math></small> are the golden sections of <small><math>\sqrt{5}</math></small>:<br>
<small><math>\phi +\frac{1}{\phi }=\sqrt{5}</math></small>
|colspan=2|<small><math>\phi = (\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>1.618034</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\chi = (3\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = (3\sqrt{5} - 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = 11/\chi = 22/(3\sqrt{5} + 1)</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|}
...
== The 8-point regular polytopes ==
In 2-space we have the regular 8-point octagon, in 3-space the regular 8-point cube, and in 4-space the regular 8-point [[16-cell]].
A planar octagon with edges of unit length has chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.84776,r_3=1+\sqrt{2} \approx 2.41421,r_4=\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{8}} \approx 2.61313</math>
The chord ratio <math>r_3=1+\sqrt{2}</math> is a geometrical proportion, the [[W:Silver ratio|silver ratio]]. Fontaine and Hurley's procedure for obtaining the reciprocal of a chord tells us that:
:<math>r_3-r_1-r_1=1/r_3 \approx 0.41421</math>
Note that <math>1/r_3=\sqrt{2}-1=r_3-2</math>.
If we embed this planar octagon in 3-space, we can make it skew, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from three others instead of two others, so we obtain a unit-edge cube with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1, r_2=\sqrt{2}, r_3=\sqrt{3}, r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
If we embed this cube in 4-space, we can skew it some more, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from six others instead of three others, so we obtain a unit-edge 4-polytope with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=1,r_3=1,r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
All of its chords except its long diameters are the same unit length as its edge. In fact they are its 24 edges, and it is a 16-cell of radius <small><math>1/\sqrt{2}</math></small>.
[[File:octagon16cell.png|thumb|Orthogonal projection of a regular 16-cell to the [[16-cell#Projections|B<sub>4</sub> Coxeter plane]]. Only its edges are shown; its long diameter chords are not drawn. All 24 edges are the same length. Only the edges of the two disjoint squares lie parallel to the projection plane, in completely orthogonal central planes.]]
The [[16-cell]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {3,3,4}. It has 8 vertices, 24 edges, 32 equilateral triangle faces, and 16 regular tetrahedron cells. It is the [[16-cell#Octahedral dipyramid|four-dimensional analogue of the octahedron]], and each of its four orthogonal central hyperplanes is an octahedron.
The only planar regular polygons found in the 16-cell are face triangles and central plane squares, but the 16-cell also contains a regular skew octagon, its [[W:Petrie polygon|Petrie polygon]]. The chords of this regular octagon, which lies skew in 4-space, are those given above for the 16-cell, as opposed to those for the cube or the regular octagon in the plane. The 16-cell has 6 such Petrie octagons, which share the same 8 vertices but have distinct sets of 8 edges each.
The regular octad has higher symmetry in 4-space than it does in 2-space. The 16-cell is the 4-orthoplex, the simplest regular 4-polytope after the [[5-cell|4-simplex]]. All the larger regular 4-polytopes, including the 120-cell, are compounds of the 16-cell. The regular octagon exhibits this high symmetry only when embedded in 4-space at the vertices of the 16-cell.
The 16-cell constitutes an [[W:Orthonormal basis|orthonormal basis]] for the choice of a 4-dimensional Cartesian reference frame, because its vertices define four orthogonal axes. The eight vertices of a unit-radius 16-cell are (±1, 0, 0, 0), (0, ±1, 0, 0), (0, 0, ±1, 0), (0, 0, 0, ±1). All vertices are connected by <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges except opposite pairs.
The vertex coordinates of the 16-cell form 6 central squares lying in 6 pairwise [[W:Orthogonal|orthogonal]] coordinate planes. Great squares in ''opposite'' planes that do not share an axis (e.g. in the ''xy'' and ''wz'' planes) are completely disjoint (they do not intersect at any vertices). These planes are [[W:Completely orthogonal|completely orthogonal]].{{Efn|name=Six orthogonal planes of the Cartesian basis}}
Since the unit-radius coordinate system is convenient, let us derive the unit-radius 16-cell by skewing a unit-radius planar octagon, which has chords of length:
:<math>r_1 \approx 0.76537,r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3= \approx 1.84774,r_4=2</math>
so we will need a planar octagon with rigid <math>r_2</math> edges, rather than one with rigid <math>r_1</math> edges. The octagon's <math>r_2</math> chords form two disjoint squares, which we can reposition in 3-space to form a cube by making them parallel, and in 4-space to form a 16-cell by making them completely orthogonal.
[[W:Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space|Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space]] can be seen as the composition of two 2-dimensional rotations in completely orthogonal planes. The general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation in pairs of completely orthogonal planes. Two completely orthogonal planes are called invariant planes of the rotation when all points in the plane rotate on circles that remain in the plane, even as the whole plane tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) into another plane. The two completely orthogonal rotations of each plane (like a wheel, and like a coin flipping) are simultaneous but independent, in that they are not geometrically constrained to turn at the same rate. However, the most circular kind of rotation (as opposed to an elliptical double rotation of a rigid spherical object) occurs when the invariant planes do rotate through the same angle in the same time interval. Such equi-angled double rotations are called [[w:SO(4)#Isoclinic_rotations|isoclinic]], also [[w:William_Kingdon_Clifford|Clifford]] displacements.
The 16-cell is the simplest possible frame in which to [[16-cell#Rotations|observe 4-dimensional rotations]] because its characteristic isoclinic rotations feature a single pair of invariant rotation planes. In the 16-cell an isoclinic rotation by 90° in any pair of invariant completely orthogonal square central planes takes every square central plane to its completely orthogonal square central plane in a twisting displacment, as they tilt sideways 90° into each other's plane while rotating 90° internally. All the vertices move at once on separate circular [[w:Geodesic|geodesics]], displaced 90° in 8 orthogonal directions, and the rigid 16-cell assumes a new orientation in 4-space. When the 90° isoclinic rotation is continued in the same rotational direction through an additional 90°, each vertex is again displaced 90°, but from the new orientation in a direction orthogonal to its first 90° displacement. After 360° of rotation each vertex reaches its antipodal position.
The trajectory of each vertex over each 90° isoclinic rotational displacement is a one-eighth segment of its geodesic orbit. Its entire orbit traces a circular helix in 4-space, and also traces a great circle twice in one of the two moving invariant rotation planes. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions just once and returns to its original position, and the 16-cell returns to its original orientation.
== Hypercubes ==
The long diameter of the unit-edge [[W:Hypercube|hypercube]] of dimension <small><math>n</math></small> is <small><math>\sqrt{n}</math></small>, so the unit-edge [[w:Tesseract|4-hypercube, the 16-point (8-cell) tesseract,]] has chords:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{1},r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3=\sqrt{3},r_4=\sqrt{4}</math>
Uniquely in its 4-dimensional case, the hypercube's edge length equals its radius, like the hexagon. We call such polytopes ''radially equilateral'', because they can be constructed from equilateral triangles which meet at their center, each contributing two radii and an edge. The cuboctahedron and the 24-cell are also radially equilateral.
The [[W:Tesseract|tesseract]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {4,3,3}. It has 16 vertices, 32 edges, 24 square faces, and 8 cube cells. It is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube.
The tesseract is the [[W:Dual polytope|dual polytope]] of the 16-cell. They have the same Petrie polygon, the regular octagon, but the tesseract contains 2 disjoint instances and 4 distinct instances of the skew octagon. We can construct the tesseract the way we constructed the 16-cell, by skewing a planar octagon's edges so they become edges of the 4-polytope. Because the tesseract has 16 vertices we will need two planar octagons, and to start we must embedded them in 4-space as completely orthogonal planes that intersect at only one point, their common center. Because the tesseract is radially equilateral (unlike the 16-cell), to build a unit-radius tesseract we start with our original octagon of unit-edge length, rather than the octagon of edge length <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> that we needed to build the unit-radius 16-cell.
For our tesseract construction we skew each planar octagon into a cube, so we have a compound of two completely orthogonal cubes. Provided the planes were completely orthogonal in 4-space and we skewed them both the same way, the 16 vertices will be the vertices of a tesseract with half of its 32 edges missing.
The 16-point tesseract is the convex hull of a compound of two 8-point 16-cells, in exact dimensional analogy to the way the 8-point cube is the convex hull of a [[W:Stellated octahedron|compound of two regular 4-point tetrahedra]]. The [[W:Demihypercube|demihypercubes]] occupy alternate vertices of the hypercubes. The diagonals of the square faces of the unit-radius tesseract are the <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges of two unit-radius 16-cells, which are also the edges of the square central planes.
Because the tesseract contains two 16-cells in alternate positions it has two sets of 6 orthogonal square central planes. Two angles are required to specify the relationship between two planes in 4-space. Pairs of planes within each 16-cell are 90° apart in one angle, and either 0° or 90° apart in the other angle. They are 90° apart in both angles if and only if they are completely orthogonal planes, 90° apart by isoclinic rotation, with no vertices in common and their corresponding vertices 180° apart. Otherwise they are 0° apart in one of the angles, 90° apart by simple rotation with their corresponding vertices 90° apart, and they intersect in one axis and lie in a common 3-dimensional hyperplane.{{Efn|A double rotation in which one of the two angles of rotation is 0°, so that one of the completely orthogonal invariant planes does not rotate, is called a simple rotation. Ordinary rotations observed in a 3-dimensional space are simple rotations.}}
A pair of square central planes from alternate 16-cells are 60° apart by isoclinic rotation, with their corresponding vertices 120° apart. The planes are not orthogonal or parallel, so they intersect in a line somewhere, but they have no vertices in common, they have no 3-dimensional hyperplane in common, and they cannot reach each other by simple rotation. Such pairs of objects are called [[W:Clifford parallel|Clifford parallel]] because all their corresponding pairs of vertices are the same distance apart, although they are not parallel in the usual sense, because they have a common center. Not only the alternate 16-cells' corresponding square central planes, but also the 16-cells themselves, are Clifford parallel objects.
We can rotate the tesseract isoclinically the way we rotated the 16-cell, by 90° in two completely orthogonal invariant square central planes, with the same effect on both alternate 16-cells. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation in invariant square central planes each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions of its 16-cell just once and returns to its original position, but it does not visit the vertex positions of the other 16-cell. The skew octagon geodesic orbits of the 16 vertices are disjoint circular helixes, and those 16 circular helixes are Clifford parallel objects.
== The 24-cell ==
In 2-space we have the radially equilateral 6-point hexagon. In 3-space we have the radially equilateral 12-point cuboctahedron, with 4 hexagonal central planes. In 4-space we have the radially equilateral 24-point 24-cell, with 4 cuboctahedral central hyperplanes and 16 hexagonal central planes.
Great hexagons are a rounder choice than great squares for the invariant rotation planes in which to rotate a 4-polytope isoclinically. The complete hexagonal isoclinic revolution requires 720° like the square isoclinic revolution, but it is completed in 6 chordal steps of 120° each rather than 8 chordal steps of 90° each.
...
== The 600-cell ==
...
== Finally the 120-cell ==
...
== Conclusions ==
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery is more than a formula for the reciprocal of a regular ''n''-polygon diagonal. It also yields the discrete sequence of isocline chords of the distinct isoclinic rotation characteristic of a ''d''-dimensional regular polytope. The characteristic rotational chord sequence of the ''d''-polytope can be represented geometrically in two dimensions on a distinct star polygon, but it lies on a geodesic circle through ''d''-dimensional space. Fontaine and Hurley discovered the geodesic topology of polytopes generally. Their procedure will reveal the geodesics of arbitrary non-uniform polytopes, since it can be applied to a polytope of any dimensionality and irregularity, by first fitting the polytope to the smallest regular polygon whose chords include its chords.
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery of a chordal formula for isoclinic rotations closes the circuit on Kappraff and Adamson's discovery of a rotational connection between dynamical systems, Steinbach's golden fields, and Coxeter's Euclidean geometry of ''n'' dimensions. Application of the Fontaine and Hurley procedure in higher-dimensional spaces demonstrates why the connection exists: because polytope sequences generally, from Steinbach's golden polygon chord sequences, to chord sequences in isoclinic rotation helixes, to subsumption relations in the sequence of regular 4-polytopes, arise as expressions of the reflections and rotations of distinct Coxeter symmetry groups, when those various groups interact.
== Appendix: Sequence of regular 4-polytopes ==
{{Regular convex 4-polytopes|wiki=W:|columns=7}}
== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=1997 | title=Golden fields: A case for the Heptagon | journal=Mathematics Magazine | volume=70 | issue=Feb 1997 | pages=22–31 | doi=10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996494 | jstor=2691048 | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|1997}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=2000 | title=Sections Beyond Golden| journal=Bridges: Mathematical Connections in Art, Music and Science | issue=2000 | pages=35-44 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2000/bridges2000-35.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|2000}}}}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Jablan | first2=Slavik | last3=Adamson | first3=Gary | last4=Sazdanovich | first4=Radmila | year=2004 | title=Golden Fields, Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, and Chaotic Matrices | journal=Forma | volume=19 | pages=367-387 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2005/bridges2005-369.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff, Jablan, Adamson & Sazdanovich|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Adamson | first2=Gary | year=2004 | title=Polygons and Chaos | journal=Dynamical Systems and Geometric Theories | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2001/bridges2001-67.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff & Adamson|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Fontaine | first1=Anne | last2=Hurley | first2=Susan | year=2006 | title=Proof by Picture: Products and Reciprocals of Diagonal Length Ratios in the Regular Polygon | journal=Forum Geometricorum | volume=6 | pages=97-101 | url=https://scispace.com/pdf/proof-by-picture-products-and-reciprocals-of-diagonal-length-1aian8mgp9.pdf }}
{{Refend}}
1uh6r1fhc1bw55q09r8tfnfewoynqoi
2808936
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2026-05-13T20:46:55Z
Dc.samizdat
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2808936
wikitext
text/x-wiki
{{align|center|David Brooks Christie}}
{{align|center|dc@samizdat.org}}
{{align|center|Draft in progress}}
{{align|center|January 2026 - April 2026}}
<blockquote>Steinbach discovered the formula for the ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. Fontaine and Hurley extended this result, discovering a formula for the reciprocal of a regular polygon chord derived geometrically from the chord's star polygon. We observe that these findings in plane geometry apply more generally, to polytopes of any dimensionality. Fontaine and Hurley's geometric procedure for finding the reciprocals of the chords of a regular polygon from their star polygons also finds the rotational geodesics of any polytope of any dimensionality.</blockquote>
== Introduction ==
Steinbach discovered the Diagonal Product Formula and the Golden Fields family of ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. He showed how this family extends beyond the pentagon {5} with its well-known golden bisection proportional to 𝜙, finding that the heptagon {7} has an analogous trisection, the nonagon {9} has an analogous quadrasection, and the hendecagon {11} has an analogous pentasection, an extended family of golden proportions with quasiperiodic properties.
Kappraff and Adamson extended these findings in plane geometry to a theory of Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, showing that the Golden Fields not only do not end with the hendecagon, they form an infinite number of periodic trajectories when operated on by the Mandelbrot operator. They found a relation between the edges of star polygons and dynamical systems in the state of chaos, revealing a connection between chaos theory, number, and rotations in Coxeter Euclidean geometry.
Fontaine and Hurley examined Steinbach's finding that the length of each chord of a regular polygon is both the product of two chords and the sum of a set of smaller chords, so that in rotations to add is to multiply. They illustrated Steinbach's sets of additive chords lying parallel to each other in the plane (pointing in the same direction), and by applying Steinbach's formula more generally they found another summation relation of signed parallel chords (pointing in opposite directions) which relates each chord length to its reciprocal, and relates the summation to a distinct star polygon rotation.
We examine these remarkable findings (which stem from study of the chords of humble regular polygons) in higher-dimensional spaces, specifically in the chords, polygons and rotations of the [[120-cell]], the largest four-dimensional regular convex polytope.
== Visualizing the 120-cell ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" width="400"
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:120-cell.gif|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point 120-cell <small><math>\{5,3,3\}</math></small> performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]].{{Sfn|Hise|2011|loc=File:120-cell.gif|ps=; "Created by Jason Hise with Maya and Macromedia Fireworks. A 3D projection of a 120-cell performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]]."}} In this simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges are shown; its 29 interior chords are not rendered. Therefore even though it is translucent, only its outer surface is visible. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 5-cells, 16-cells, 8-cells, 24-cells, 600-cells and its much larger inventory of polyhedra, are completely invisible in this view, as none of their edges are rendered at all.
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point [[W:Great grand stellated 120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] <small><math>\{\tfrac{5}{2},3,3\}</math></small>.{{Sfn|Ruen: Great grand stellated 120-cell|2007}} The 120-cell is its convex hull. The projection to the left renders only the 120-cell's shortest chord, its 1200 edges. The projection above also renders only one of the 120-cell's 30 chords, the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. The 120-cell itself (the convex hull) is invisible in this view, as its edges are not rendered.
|}
[[120-cell#Geometry|The 120-cell is the maximally complex regular 4-polytope]], containing inscribed instances of every regular 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-polytope, except the regular polygons of more than {15} sides.
The 120-cell is the convex hull of a regular [[120-cell#Relationships among interior polytopes|compound of each of the 6 regular convex 4-polytopes]]. They are the [[5-cell|5-point (5-cell) 4-simplex]], the [[16-cell|8-point (16-cell) 4-orthoplex]], the [[W:Tesseract|16-point (8-cell) tesseract]], the [[24-cell|24-point (24-cell)]], the [[600-cell|120-point (600-cell)]], and the [[120-cell|600-point (120-cell)]]. The 120-cell is the convex hull of a compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells, of 75 disjoint 16-cells, of 25 disjoint 24-cells, and of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
The 120-cell contains an even larger inventory of irregular polytopes, created by the intersection of multiple instances of these component regular 4-polytopes. Many are quite unexpected, because they do not occur as components of any regular polytope smaller than the 120-cell. As just one example among the [[120-cell#Concentric hulls|sections of the 120-cell]], there is an irregular 24-point polyhedron with 16 triangle faces and 4 nonagon {9} faces.{{Sfn|Moxness|}}
Most renderings of the 120-cell, like the rotating projection here, only illustrate its outer surface, which is a honeycomb of face-bonded dodecahedral cells. Only the objects in its 3-dimensional surface are rendered, namely the 120 dodecahedra, their pentagon faces, and their edges. Although the 120-cell has chords of 30 distinct lengths, in this kind of simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges (its shortest chord) are shown. Its 29 interior chords, the edges of objects in the interior of the 120-cell, are not rendered, so interior objects are not visible at all.
Visualizing the complete interior of the 600-vertex 120-cell in a single image is impractical because of its complexity. Only four 120-cell edges are incident at each vertex, but [[120-cell#Chords|600 chords (of all 30 lengths)]] are incident at ''each'' vertex.
== Compounds in the 120-cell ==
The 8-point (16-cell), not the 5-point (5-cell), is the smallest building block; it compounds to every larger regular 4-polytope. The 5-point (5-cell) does compound to the 600-point (120-cell), but it does not fit into any smaller regular 4-polytope.
The 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 2 in the 16-point (8-cell), and by 3 in the 24-point (24-cell). The 16-point (8-cell) compounds in the 24-point (24-cell) by 3 non-disjoint instances of itself, with each of the 24 vertices shared by two 16-point (8-cells). The 24-point (24-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell), and the 120-point (600-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell).
The 24-point (24-cell) also compounds by <math>5^2</math> non-disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell); it compounds in 5 disjoint instances of itself, 10 (not 5) different ways. Whichever set of 5 disjoint 24-point (24-cells) are assembled, the resulting 120-point (600-cell) contains 25 distinct 24-point (24-cells), not just 5 (or 10). This implies that 15 disjoint 8-point (16-cells) will construct a 120-point (600-cell), which will contain 75 distinct 8-point (16-cells).
The 600-point (120-cell) is 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), just 2 different ways (not 5 or 10 ways), so it is 10 distinct 120-point (600-cells). This implies that the 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 3 times <math>5^2</math> (75) disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell), which contains <math>3^2</math> times <math>5^2</math> (225) distinct instances of the 24-point (24-cell), and <math>3^3</math> times <math>5^2</math> (675) distinct instances of the 8-point (16-cell).
These facts were discovered painstakingly by various researchers, and no one has found a general rule governing subsumption relations among regular polytopes. The reasons for some of their numeric incidence relations are far from obvious. [[W:Pieter Hendrik Schoute|Schoute]] was the first to see that the 120-point (600-cell) is a compound of 5 24-point (24-cells) ''10 different ways'', and after he saw it a hundred years lapsed until Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne proved his result, and showed why.{{Sfn|Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne|2020|loc=''The geometry of H4 polytopes''}}
So much for the compounds of 16-cells. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. That stellated compound (without its convex hull of 120-cell edges) is the [[w:Great_grand_stellated_120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] illustrated above, the final regular [[W:Stellation|stellation]] of the 120-cell, and the only [[W:Schläfli-Hess polychoron|regular star 4-polytope]] to have the 120-cell for its convex hull. The edges of the great grand stellated 120-cell are <math>\phi^6</math> as long as those of its 120-cell [[W:List of polyhedral stellations#Stellation process|stellation core]] deep inside.
The compound of 120 disjoint 5-point (5-cells) can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point (600-cell), expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell, by adding 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells): a 120-cell.
== Thirty distinguished distances ==
The 30 numbers listed in the table are all-important in Euclidean geometry. A case can be made on symmetry grounds that their squares are the 30 most important numbers between 0 and 4. The 30 rows of the table are the 30 distinct [[120-cell#Geodesic rectangles|chord lengths of the unit-radius 120-cell]], the largest regular convex 4-polytope. Since the 120-cell subsumes all smaller regular polytopes, its 30 chords are the complete chord set of all the regular polytopes that can be constructed in the first four dimensions of Euclidean space, except for regular polygons of more than 15 sides.
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;text-align:center"
!rowspan=2|<math>c_t</math>
!rowspan=2|arc
!rowspan=2|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{n}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|<math>\left\{p\right\}</math>
!rowspan=2|<small><math>m\left\{\frac{k}{d}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|Steinbach roots
!colspan=7|Chord lengths of the unit 120-cell
|-
!colspan=5|unit-radius length <math>c_t</math>
!colspan=2|unit-edge length <math>c_t/c_1</math><br>in 120-cell of radius <math>c_8=\sqrt{2}\phi^2</math>
|-
|<small><math>c_{1,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>15.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{4,1}-c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.270091</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^4}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.072949}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>25.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{15\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(c_{18,1}-c_{4,1}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{3-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.437016</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.190983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{3,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>36{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{10\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>3 \left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>0.618034</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.381966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.28825</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>41.4{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.707107</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{5,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>44.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{\frac{15}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.756934</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.572949}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.80252</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{6,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>49.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{17}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.831254</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5}}{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.690983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.07768</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{7,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>56.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.93913</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.881966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.47709</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>60{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.70246</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{9,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>66.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{2 \phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.09132</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.04057</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{10,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>69.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2 \sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.14412</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi }{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>4.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{11,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>72{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{6}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.17557</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.38197}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \sqrt{3-\phi } \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.3525</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>75.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{24}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.22474</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.53457</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{13,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>81.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.30038</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.8146</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{14,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>84.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi } c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{1+\sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.345</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi }}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5} \phi }{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.9798</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{15,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>90.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.41421</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{16,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>95.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{29}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.4802</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.48037</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{17,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>98.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{31}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.51954</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(7+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.62605</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{18,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>104.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{8}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.58114</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{5} \sqrt{\phi ^4}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{19,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>108.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{3,1}+c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>5.9907</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{20,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>110.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.64042</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.07359</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{21,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>113.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{19}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.67601</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\chi }{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.20537</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{22,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>120{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{10}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.73205</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{6} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.41285</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{23,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>124.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{41}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }+\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.7658</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.11803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.53779</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{24,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>130.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.81907</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\sqrt{5}}{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.73503</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{25,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>135.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.85123</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi ^2}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^4}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.42705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^4</math></small>
|<small><math>6.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{26,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>138.6{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{12}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.87083</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{7} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.92667</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{27,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>144{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{12}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{5}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.90211</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\phi +2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{2 \phi +4}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.0425</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{28,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>154.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.95167</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.22598</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{29,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>164.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{14}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.98168</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3 \phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.92705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>7.33708</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{30,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>180{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{15}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>7.40492</math></small>
|-
|rowspan=4 colspan=6|
|rowspan=4 colspan=4|
<small><math>\phi</math></small> is the golden ratio:<br>
<small><math>\phi ^2-\phi -1=0</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }+1=\phi</math></small>, and: <small><math>\phi+1=\phi^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }::1::\phi ::\phi ^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>1/\phi</math></small> and <small><math>\phi</math></small> are the golden sections of <small><math>\sqrt{5}</math></small>:<br>
<small><math>\phi +\frac{1}{\phi }=\sqrt{5}</math></small>
|colspan=2|<small><math>\phi = (\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>1.618034</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\chi = (3\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = (3\sqrt{5} - 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = 11/\chi = 22/(3\sqrt{5} + 1)</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|}
...
== The 8-point regular polytopes ==
In 2-space we have the regular 8-point octagon, in 3-space the regular 8-point cube, and in 4-space the regular 8-point [[16-cell]].
A planar octagon with edges of unit length has chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.84776,r_3=1+\sqrt{2} \approx 2.41421,r_4=\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{8}} \approx 2.61313</math>
The chord ratio <math>r_3=1+\sqrt{2}</math> is a geometrical proportion, the [[W:Silver ratio|silver ratio]]. Fontaine and Hurley's procedure for obtaining the reciprocal of a chord tells us that:
:<math>r_3-r_1-r_1=1/r_3 \approx 0.41421</math>
Note that <math>1/r_3=\sqrt{2}-1=r_3-2</math>.
If we embed this planar octagon in 3-space, we can make it skew, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from three others instead of two others, so we obtain a unit-edge cube with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1, r_2=\sqrt{2}, r_3=\sqrt{3}, r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
If we embed this cube in 4-space, we can skew it some more, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from six others instead of three others, so we obtain a unit-edge 4-polytope with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=1,r_3=1,r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
All of its chords except its long diameters are the same unit length as its edge. In fact they are its 24 edges, and it is a 16-cell of radius <small><math>1/\sqrt{2}</math></small>.
[[File:octagon16cell.png|thumb|Orthogonal projection of a regular 16-cell to the [[16-cell#Projections|B<sub>4</sub> Coxeter plane]]. Only its edges are shown; its long diameter chords are not drawn. All 24 edges are the same length. Only the edges of the two disjoint squares lie parallel to the projection plane, in completely orthogonal central planes.]]
The [[16-cell]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {3,3,4}. It has 8 vertices, 24 edges, 32 equilateral triangle faces, and 16 regular tetrahedron cells. It is the [[16-cell#Octahedral dipyramid|four-dimensional analogue of the octahedron]], and each of its four orthogonal central hyperplanes is an octahedron.
The only planar regular polygons found in the 16-cell are face triangles and central plane squares, but the 16-cell also contains a regular skew octagon, its [[W:Petrie polygon|Petrie polygon]]. The chords of this regular octagon, which lies skew in 4-space, are those given above for the 16-cell, as opposed to those for the cube or the regular octagon in the plane. The 16-cell has 6 such Petrie octagons, which share the same 8 vertices but have distinct sets of 8 edges each.
The regular octad has higher symmetry in 4-space than it does in 2-space. The 16-cell is the 4-orthoplex, the simplest regular 4-polytope after the [[5-cell|4-simplex]]. All the larger regular 4-polytopes, including the 120-cell, are compounds of the 16-cell. The regular octagon exhibits this high symmetry only when embedded in 4-space at the vertices of the 16-cell.
The 16-cell constitutes an [[W:Orthonormal basis|orthonormal basis]] for the choice of a 4-dimensional Cartesian reference frame, because its vertices define four orthogonal axes. The eight vertices of a unit-radius 16-cell are (±1, 0, 0, 0), (0, ±1, 0, 0), (0, 0, ±1, 0), (0, 0, 0, ±1). All vertices are connected by <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges except opposite pairs.
The vertex coordinates of the 16-cell form 6 central squares lying in 6 pairwise [[W:Orthogonal|orthogonal]] coordinate planes. Great squares in ''opposite'' planes that do not share an axis (e.g. in the ''xy'' and ''wz'' planes) are completely disjoint (they do not intersect at any vertices). These planes are [[W:Completely orthogonal|completely orthogonal]].{{Efn|name=Six orthogonal planes of the Cartesian basis}}
Since this unit-radius coordinate system is convenient, let us derive the unit-radius 16-cell by skewing a unit-radius planar octagon, which has chords of length:
:<math>r_1 \approx 0.76537,r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3= \approx 1.84774,r_4=2</math>
We will need a planar octagon with rigid <math>r_2</math> chords, rather than one with rigid <math>r_1</math> edges. The octagon's <math>r_2</math> chords form two disjoint squares, which we can reposition in 3-space to form a cube by making them parallel, and in 4-space to form a 16-cell by making them completely orthogonal.
[[W:Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space|Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space]] can be seen as the composition of two 2-dimensional rotations in completely orthogonal planes. The general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation in pairs of completely orthogonal planes. Two completely orthogonal planes are called invariant planes of the rotation when all points in the plane rotate on circles that remain in the plane, even as the whole plane tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) into another plane. The two completely orthogonal rotations of each plane (like a wheel, and like a coin flipping) are simultaneous but independent, in that they are not geometrically constrained to turn at the same rate. However, the most circular kind of rotation (as opposed to an elliptical double rotation of a rigid spherical object) occurs when the invariant planes do rotate through the same angle in the same time interval. Such equi-angled double rotations are called [[w:SO(4)#Isoclinic_rotations|isoclinic]], also [[w:William_Kingdon_Clifford|Clifford]] displacements.
The 16-cell is the simplest possible frame in which to [[16-cell#Rotations|observe 4-dimensional rotations]] because its characteristic isoclinic rotations feature a single pair of invariant rotation planes. In the 16-cell an isoclinic rotation by 90° in any pair of invariant completely orthogonal square central planes takes every square central plane to its completely orthogonal square central plane in a twisting displacment, as they tilt sideways 90° into each other's plane while rotating 90° internally. All the vertices move at once on separate circular [[w:Geodesic|geodesics]], displaced 90° in 8 orthogonal directions, and the rigid 16-cell assumes a new orientation in 4-space. When the 90° isoclinic rotation is continued in the same rotational direction through an additional 90°, each vertex is again displaced 90°, but from the new orientation in a direction orthogonal to its first 90° displacement. After 360° of rotation each vertex reaches its antipodal position.
The trajectory of each vertex over each 90° isoclinic rotational displacement is a one-eighth segment of its geodesic orbit. Its entire orbit traces a circular helix in 4-space, and also traces a great circle twice in one of the two moving invariant rotation planes. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions just once and returns to its original position, and the 16-cell returns to its original orientation.
== Hypercubes ==
The long diameter of the unit-edge [[W:Hypercube|hypercube]] of dimension <small><math>n</math></small> is <small><math>\sqrt{n}</math></small>, so the unit-edge [[w:Tesseract|4-hypercube, the 16-point (8-cell) tesseract,]] has chords:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{1},r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3=\sqrt{3},r_4=\sqrt{4}</math>
Uniquely in its 4-dimensional case, the hypercube's edge length equals its radius, like the hexagon. We call such polytopes ''radially equilateral'', because they can be constructed from equilateral triangles which meet at their center, each contributing two radii and an edge. The cuboctahedron and the 24-cell are also radially equilateral.
The [[W:Tesseract|tesseract]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {4,3,3}. It has 16 vertices, 32 edges, 24 square faces, and 8 cube cells. It is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube.
The tesseract is the [[W:Dual polytope|dual polytope]] of the 16-cell. They have the same Petrie polygon, the regular octagon, but the tesseract contains 2 disjoint instances and 4 distinct instances of the skew octagon. We can construct the tesseract the way we constructed the 16-cell, by skewing a planar octagon's edges so they become edges of the 4-polytope. Because the tesseract has 16 vertices we will need two planar octagons, and to start we must embedded them in 4-space as completely orthogonal planes that intersect at only one point, their common center. Because the tesseract is radially equilateral (unlike the 16-cell), to build a unit-radius tesseract we start with our original octagon of unit-edge length, rather than the octagon of edge length <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> that we needed to build the unit-radius 16-cell.
For our tesseract construction we skew each planar octagon into a cube, so we have a compound of two completely orthogonal cubes. Provided the planes were completely orthogonal in 4-space and we skewed them both the same way, the 16 vertices will be the vertices of a tesseract with half of its 32 edges missing.
The 16-point tesseract is the convex hull of a compound of two 8-point 16-cells, in exact dimensional analogy to the way the 8-point cube is the convex hull of a [[W:Stellated octahedron|compound of two regular 4-point tetrahedra]]. The [[W:Demihypercube|demihypercubes]] occupy alternate vertices of the hypercubes. The diagonals of the square faces of the unit-radius tesseract are the <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges of two unit-radius 16-cells, which are also the edges of the square central planes.
Because the tesseract contains two 16-cells in alternate positions it has two sets of 6 orthogonal square central planes. Two angles are required to specify the relationship between two planes in 4-space. Pairs of planes within each 16-cell are 90° apart in one angle, and either 0° or 90° apart in the other angle. They are 90° apart in both angles if and only if they are completely orthogonal planes, 90° apart by isoclinic rotation, with no vertices in common and their corresponding vertices 180° apart. Otherwise they are 0° apart in one of the angles, 90° apart by simple rotation with their corresponding vertices 90° apart, and they intersect in one axis and lie in a common 3-dimensional hyperplane.{{Efn|A double rotation in which one of the two angles of rotation is 0°, so that one of the completely orthogonal invariant planes does not rotate, is called a simple rotation. Ordinary rotations observed in a 3-dimensional space are simple rotations.}}
A pair of square central planes from alternate 16-cells are 60° apart by isoclinic rotation, with their corresponding vertices 120° apart. The planes are not orthogonal or parallel, so they intersect in a line somewhere, but they have no vertices in common, they have no 3-dimensional hyperplane in common, and they cannot reach each other by simple rotation. Such pairs of objects are called [[W:Clifford parallel|Clifford parallel]] because all their corresponding pairs of vertices are the same distance apart, although they are not parallel in the usual sense, because they have a common center. Not only the alternate 16-cells' corresponding square central planes, but also the 16-cells themselves, are Clifford parallel objects.
We can rotate the tesseract isoclinically the way we rotated the 16-cell, by 90° in two completely orthogonal invariant square central planes, with the same effect on both alternate 16-cells. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation in invariant square central planes each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions of its 16-cell just once and returns to its original position, but it does not visit the vertex positions of the other 16-cell. The skew octagon geodesic orbits of the 16 vertices are disjoint circular helixes, and those 16 circular helixes are Clifford parallel objects.
== The 24-cell ==
In 2-space we have the radially equilateral 6-point hexagon. In 3-space we have the radially equilateral 12-point cuboctahedron, with 4 hexagonal central planes. In 4-space we have the radially equilateral 24-point 24-cell, with 4 cuboctahedral central hyperplanes and 16 hexagonal central planes.
Great hexagons are a rounder choice than great squares for the invariant rotation planes in which to rotate a 4-polytope isoclinically. The complete hexagonal isoclinic revolution requires 720° like the square isoclinic revolution, but it is completed in 6 chordal steps of 120° each rather than 8 chordal steps of 90° each.
...
== The 600-cell ==
...
== Finally the 120-cell ==
...
== Conclusions ==
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery is more than a formula for the reciprocal of a regular ''n''-polygon diagonal. It also yields the discrete sequence of isocline chords of the distinct isoclinic rotation characteristic of a ''d''-dimensional regular polytope. The characteristic rotational chord sequence of the ''d''-polytope can be represented geometrically in two dimensions on a distinct star polygon, but it lies on a geodesic circle through ''d''-dimensional space. Fontaine and Hurley discovered the geodesic topology of polytopes generally. Their procedure will reveal the geodesics of arbitrary non-uniform polytopes, since it can be applied to a polytope of any dimensionality and irregularity, by first fitting the polytope to the smallest regular polygon whose chords include its chords.
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery of a chordal formula for isoclinic rotations closes the circuit on Kappraff and Adamson's discovery of a rotational connection between dynamical systems, Steinbach's golden fields, and Coxeter's Euclidean geometry of ''n'' dimensions. Application of the Fontaine and Hurley procedure in higher-dimensional spaces demonstrates why the connection exists: because polytope sequences generally, from Steinbach's golden polygon chord sequences, to chord sequences in isoclinic rotation helixes, to subsumption relations in the sequence of regular 4-polytopes, arise as expressions of the reflections and rotations of distinct Coxeter symmetry groups, when those various groups interact.
== Appendix: Sequence of regular 4-polytopes ==
{{Regular convex 4-polytopes|wiki=W:|columns=7}}
== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=1997 | title=Golden fields: A case for the Heptagon | journal=Mathematics Magazine | volume=70 | issue=Feb 1997 | pages=22–31 | doi=10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996494 | jstor=2691048 | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|1997}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=2000 | title=Sections Beyond Golden| journal=Bridges: Mathematical Connections in Art, Music and Science | issue=2000 | pages=35-44 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2000/bridges2000-35.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|2000}}}}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Jablan | first2=Slavik | last3=Adamson | first3=Gary | last4=Sazdanovich | first4=Radmila | year=2004 | title=Golden Fields, Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, and Chaotic Matrices | journal=Forma | volume=19 | pages=367-387 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2005/bridges2005-369.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff, Jablan, Adamson & Sazdanovich|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Adamson | first2=Gary | year=2004 | title=Polygons and Chaos | journal=Dynamical Systems and Geometric Theories | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2001/bridges2001-67.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff & Adamson|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Fontaine | first1=Anne | last2=Hurley | first2=Susan | year=2006 | title=Proof by Picture: Products and Reciprocals of Diagonal Length Ratios in the Regular Polygon | journal=Forum Geometricorum | volume=6 | pages=97-101 | url=https://scispace.com/pdf/proof-by-picture-products-and-reciprocals-of-diagonal-length-1aian8mgp9.pdf }}
{{Refend}}
im4yr39wxpqn9i79z2pdhq5tpuktazl
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{{align|center|David Brooks Christie}}
{{align|center|dc@samizdat.org}}
{{align|center|Draft in progress}}
{{align|center|January 2026 - April 2026}}
<blockquote>Steinbach discovered the formula for the ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. Fontaine and Hurley extended this result, discovering a formula for the reciprocal of a regular polygon chord derived geometrically from the chord's star polygon. We observe that these findings in plane geometry apply more generally, to polytopes of any dimensionality. Fontaine and Hurley's geometric procedure for finding the reciprocals of the chords of a regular polygon from their star polygons also finds the rotational geodesics of any polytope of any dimensionality.</blockquote>
== Introduction ==
Steinbach discovered the Diagonal Product Formula and the Golden Fields family of ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. He showed how this family extends beyond the pentagon {5} with its well-known golden bisection proportional to 𝜙, finding that the heptagon {7} has an analogous trisection, the nonagon {9} has an analogous quadrasection, and the hendecagon {11} has an analogous pentasection, an extended family of golden proportions with quasiperiodic properties.
Kappraff and Adamson extended these findings in plane geometry to a theory of Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, showing that the Golden Fields not only do not end with the hendecagon, they form an infinite number of periodic trajectories when operated on by the Mandelbrot operator. They found a relation between the edges of star polygons and dynamical systems in the state of chaos, revealing a connection between chaos theory, number, and rotations in Coxeter Euclidean geometry.
Fontaine and Hurley examined Steinbach's finding that the length of each chord of a regular polygon is both the product of two chords and the sum of a set of smaller chords, so that in rotations to add is to multiply. They illustrated Steinbach's sets of additive chords lying parallel to each other in the plane (pointing in the same direction), and by applying Steinbach's formula more generally they found another summation relation of signed parallel chords (pointing in opposite directions) which relates each chord length to its reciprocal, and relates the summation to a distinct star polygon rotation.
We examine these remarkable findings (which stem from study of the chords of humble regular polygons) in higher-dimensional spaces, specifically in the chords, polygons and rotations of the [[120-cell]], the largest four-dimensional regular convex polytope.
== Visualizing the 120-cell ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" width="400"
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:120-cell.gif|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point 120-cell <small><math>\{5,3,3\}</math></small> performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]].{{Sfn|Hise|2011|loc=File:120-cell.gif|ps=; "Created by Jason Hise with Maya and Macromedia Fireworks. A 3D projection of a 120-cell performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]]."}} In this simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges are shown; its 29 interior chords are not rendered. Therefore even though it is translucent, only its outer surface is visible. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 5-cells, 16-cells, 8-cells, 24-cells, 600-cells and its much larger inventory of polyhedra, are completely invisible in this view, as none of their edges are rendered at all.
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point [[W:Great grand stellated 120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] <small><math>\{\tfrac{5}{2},3,3\}</math></small>.{{Sfn|Ruen: Great grand stellated 120-cell|2007}} The 120-cell is its convex hull. The projection to the left renders only the 120-cell's shortest chord, its 1200 edges. The projection above also renders only one of the 120-cell's 30 chords, the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. The 120-cell itself (the convex hull) is invisible in this view, as its edges are not rendered.
|}
[[120-cell#Geometry|The 120-cell is the maximally complex regular 4-polytope]], containing inscribed instances of every regular 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-polytope, except the regular polygons of more than {15} sides.
The 120-cell is the convex hull of a regular [[120-cell#Relationships among interior polytopes|compound of each of the 6 regular convex 4-polytopes]]. They are the [[5-cell|5-point (5-cell) 4-simplex]], the [[16-cell|8-point (16-cell) 4-orthoplex]], the [[W:Tesseract|16-point (8-cell) tesseract]], the [[24-cell|24-point (24-cell)]], the [[600-cell|120-point (600-cell)]], and the [[120-cell|600-point (120-cell)]]. The 120-cell is the convex hull of a compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells, of 75 disjoint 16-cells, of 25 disjoint 24-cells, and of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
The 120-cell contains an even larger inventory of irregular polytopes, created by the intersection of multiple instances of these component regular 4-polytopes. Many are quite unexpected, because they do not occur as components of any regular polytope smaller than the 120-cell. As just one example among the [[120-cell#Concentric hulls|sections of the 120-cell]], there is an irregular 24-point polyhedron with 16 triangle faces and 4 nonagon {9} faces.{{Sfn|Moxness|}}
Most renderings of the 120-cell, like the rotating projection here, only illustrate its outer surface, which is a honeycomb of face-bonded dodecahedral cells. Only the objects in its 3-dimensional surface are rendered, namely the 120 dodecahedra, their pentagon faces, and their edges. Although the 120-cell has chords of 30 distinct lengths, in this kind of simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges (its shortest chord) are shown. Its 29 interior chords, the edges of objects in the interior of the 120-cell, are not rendered, so interior objects are not visible at all.
Visualizing the complete interior of the 600-vertex 120-cell in a single image is impractical because of its complexity. Only four 120-cell edges are incident at each vertex, but [[120-cell#Chords|600 chords (of all 30 lengths)]] are incident at ''each'' vertex.
== Compounds in the 120-cell ==
The 8-point (16-cell), not the 5-point (5-cell), is the smallest building block; it compounds to every larger regular 4-polytope. The 5-point (5-cell) does compound to the 600-point (120-cell), but it does not fit into any smaller regular 4-polytope.
The 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 2 in the 16-point (8-cell), and by 3 in the 24-point (24-cell). The 16-point (8-cell) compounds in the 24-point (24-cell) by 3 non-disjoint instances of itself, with each of the 24 vertices shared by two 16-point (8-cells). The 24-point (24-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell), and the 120-point (600-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell).
The 24-point (24-cell) also compounds by <math>5^2</math> non-disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell); it compounds in 5 disjoint instances of itself, 10 (not 5) different ways. Whichever set of 5 disjoint 24-point (24-cells) are assembled, the resulting 120-point (600-cell) contains 25 distinct 24-point (24-cells), not just 5 (or 10). This implies that 15 disjoint 8-point (16-cells) will construct a 120-point (600-cell), which will contain 75 distinct 8-point (16-cells).
The 600-point (120-cell) is 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), just 2 different ways (not 5 or 10 ways), so it is 10 distinct 120-point (600-cells). This implies that the 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 3 times <math>5^2</math> (75) disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell), which contains <math>3^2</math> times <math>5^2</math> (225) distinct instances of the 24-point (24-cell), and <math>3^3</math> times <math>5^2</math> (675) distinct instances of the 8-point (16-cell).
These facts were discovered painstakingly by various researchers, and no one has found a general rule governing subsumption relations among regular polytopes. The reasons for some of their numeric incidence relations are far from obvious. [[W:Pieter Hendrik Schoute|Schoute]] was the first to see that the 120-point (600-cell) is a compound of 5 24-point (24-cells) ''10 different ways'', and after he saw it a hundred years lapsed until Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne proved his result, and showed why.{{Sfn|Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne|2020|loc=''The geometry of H4 polytopes''}}
So much for the compounds of 16-cells. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. That stellated compound (without its convex hull of 120-cell edges) is the [[w:Great_grand_stellated_120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] illustrated above, the final regular [[W:Stellation|stellation]] of the 120-cell, and the only [[W:Schläfli-Hess polychoron|regular star 4-polytope]] to have the 120-cell for its convex hull. The edges of the great grand stellated 120-cell are <math>\phi^6</math> as long as those of its 120-cell [[W:List of polyhedral stellations#Stellation process|stellation core]] deep inside.
The compound of 120 disjoint 5-point (5-cells) can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point (600-cell), expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell, by adding 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells): a 120-cell.
== Thirty distinguished distances ==
The 30 numbers listed in the table are all-important in Euclidean geometry. A case can be made on symmetry grounds that their squares are the 30 most important numbers between 0 and 4. The 30 rows of the table are the 30 distinct [[120-cell#Geodesic rectangles|chord lengths of the unit-radius 120-cell]], the largest regular convex 4-polytope. Since the 120-cell subsumes all smaller regular polytopes, its 30 chords are the complete chord set of all the regular polytopes that can be constructed in the first four dimensions of Euclidean space, except for regular polygons of more than 15 sides.
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;text-align:center"
!rowspan=2|<math>c_t</math>
!rowspan=2|arc
!rowspan=2|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{n}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|<math>\left\{p\right\}</math>
!rowspan=2|<small><math>m\left\{\frac{k}{d}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|Steinbach roots
!colspan=7|Chord lengths of the unit 120-cell
|-
!colspan=5|unit-radius length <math>c_t</math>
!colspan=2|unit-edge length <math>c_t/c_1</math><br>in 120-cell of radius <math>c_8=\sqrt{2}\phi^2</math>
|-
|<small><math>c_{1,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>15.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{4,1}-c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.270091</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^4}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.072949}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>25.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{15\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(c_{18,1}-c_{4,1}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{3-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.437016</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.190983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{3,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>36{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{10\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>3 \left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>0.618034</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.381966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.28825</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>41.4{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.707107</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{5,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>44.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{\frac{15}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.756934</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.572949}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.80252</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{6,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>49.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{17}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.831254</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5}}{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.690983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.07768</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{7,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>56.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.93913</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.881966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.47709</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>60{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.70246</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{9,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>66.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{2 \phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.09132</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.04057</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{10,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>69.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2 \sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.14412</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi }{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>4.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{11,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>72{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{6}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.17557</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.38197}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \sqrt{3-\phi } \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.3525</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>75.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{24}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.22474</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.53457</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{13,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>81.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.30038</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.8146</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{14,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>84.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi } c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{1+\sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.345</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi }}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5} \phi }{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.9798</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{15,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>90.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.41421</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{16,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>95.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{29}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.4802</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.48037</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{17,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>98.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{31}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.51954</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(7+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.62605</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{18,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>104.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{8}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.58114</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{5} \sqrt{\phi ^4}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{19,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>108.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{3,1}+c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>5.9907</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{20,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>110.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.64042</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.07359</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{21,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>113.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{19}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.67601</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\chi }{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.20537</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{22,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>120{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{10}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.73205</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{6} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.41285</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{23,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>124.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{41}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }+\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.7658</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.11803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.53779</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{24,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>130.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.81907</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\sqrt{5}}{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.73503</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{25,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>135.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.85123</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi ^2}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^4}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.42705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^4</math></small>
|<small><math>6.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{26,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>138.6{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{12}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.87083</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{7} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.92667</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{27,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>144{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{12}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{5}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.90211</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\phi +2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{2 \phi +4}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.0425</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{28,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>154.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.95167</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.22598</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{29,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>164.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{14}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.98168</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3 \phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.92705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>7.33708</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{30,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>180{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{15}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>7.40492</math></small>
|-
|rowspan=4 colspan=6|
|rowspan=4 colspan=4|
<small><math>\phi</math></small> is the golden ratio:<br>
<small><math>\phi ^2-\phi -1=0</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }+1=\phi</math></small>, and: <small><math>\phi+1=\phi^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }::1::\phi ::\phi ^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>1/\phi</math></small> and <small><math>\phi</math></small> are the golden sections of <small><math>\sqrt{5}</math></small>:<br>
<small><math>\phi +\frac{1}{\phi }=\sqrt{5}</math></small>
|colspan=2|<small><math>\phi = (\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>1.618034</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\chi = (3\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = (3\sqrt{5} - 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = 11/\chi = 22/(3\sqrt{5} + 1)</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|}
...
== The 8-point regular polytopes ==
In 2-space we have the regular 8-point octagon, in 3-space the regular 8-point cube, and in 4-space the regular 8-point [[16-cell]].
A planar octagon with edges of unit length has chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.84776,r_3=1+\sqrt{2} \approx 2.41421,r_4=\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{8}} \approx 2.61313</math>
The chord ratio <math>r_3=1+\sqrt{2}</math> is a geometrical proportion, the [[W:Silver ratio|silver ratio]]. Fontaine and Hurley's procedure for obtaining the reciprocal of a chord tells us that:
:<math>r_3-r_1-r_1=1/r_3 \approx 0.41421</math>
Note that <math>1/r_3=\sqrt{2}-1=r_3-2</math>.
If we embed this planar octagon in 3-space, we can make it skew, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from three others instead of two others, so we obtain a unit-edge cube with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1, r_2=\sqrt{2}, r_3=\sqrt{3}, r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
If we embed this cube in 4-space, we can skew it some more, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from six others instead of three others, so we obtain a unit-edge 4-polytope with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=1,r_3=1,r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
All of its chords except its long diameters are the same unit length as its edge. In fact they are its 24 edges, and it is a 16-cell of radius <small><math>1/\sqrt{2}</math></small>.
[[File:octagon16cell.png|thumb|Orthogonal projection of a regular 16-cell to the [[16-cell#Projections|B<sub>4</sub> Coxeter plane]]. Only its edges are shown; its long diameter chords are not drawn. All 24 edges are the same length. Only the edges of the two disjoint squares lie parallel to the projection plane, in completely orthogonal central planes.]]
The [[16-cell]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {3,3,4}. It has 8 vertices, 24 edges, 32 equilateral triangle faces, and 16 regular tetrahedron cells. It is the [[16-cell#Octahedral dipyramid|four-dimensional analogue of the octahedron]], and each of its four orthogonal central hyperplanes is an octahedron.
The only planar regular polygons found in the 16-cell are face triangles and central plane squares, but the 16-cell also contains a regular skew octagon, its [[W:Petrie polygon|Petrie polygon]]. The chords of this regular octagon, which lies skew in 4-space, are those given above for the 16-cell, as opposed to those for the cube or the regular octagon in the plane. The 16-cell has 6 such Petrie octagons, which share the same 8 vertices but have distinct sets of 8 edges each.
The regular octad has higher symmetry in 4-space than it does in 2-space. The 16-cell is the 4-orthoplex, the simplest regular 4-polytope after the [[5-cell|4-simplex]]. All the larger regular 4-polytopes, including the 120-cell, are compounds of the 16-cell. The regular octagon exhibits this high symmetry only when embedded in 4-space at the vertices of the 16-cell.
The 16-cell constitutes an [[W:Orthonormal basis|orthonormal basis]] for the choice of a 4-dimensional Cartesian reference frame, because its vertices define four orthogonal axes. The eight vertices of a unit-radius 16-cell are (±1, 0, 0, 0), (0, ±1, 0, 0), (0, 0, ±1, 0), (0, 0, 0, ±1). All vertices are connected by <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges except opposite pairs.
The vertex coordinates of the 16-cell form 6 central squares lying in 6 pairwise [[W:Orthogonal|orthogonal]] coordinate planes. Great squares in ''opposite'' planes that do not share an axis (e.g. in the ''xy'' and ''wz'' planes) are completely disjoint (they do not intersect at any vertices). These planes are [[W:Completely orthogonal|completely orthogonal]].{{Efn|name=Six orthogonal planes of the Cartesian basis}}
Since this unit-radius coordinate system is convenient, let us derive the unit-radius 16-cell by skewing a unit-radius planar octagon, which has chords of length:
:<math>r_1 \approx 0.76537,r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3= \approx 1.84774,r_4=2</math>
We will need a planar octagon with rigid <math>r_2</math> chords, rather than one with rigid <math>r_1</math> edges. The octagon's <math>r_2</math> chords form two disjoint squares, which we can reposition in 3-space to form a cube by making them parallel, and in 4-space to form a 16-cell by making them completely orthogonal.
[[W:Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space|Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space]] can be seen as the composition of two 2-dimensional rotations in completely orthogonal planes. The general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation in pairs of completely orthogonal planes. Two completely orthogonal planes are called invariant planes of the rotation when all points in the plane rotate on circles that remain in the plane, even as the whole plane tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) into another plane. The two completely orthogonal rotations of each plane (like a wheel, and like a coin flipping) are simultaneous but independent, in that they are not geometrically constrained to turn at the same rate. However, the most circular kind of rotation (as opposed to an elliptical double rotation of a rigid spherical object) occurs when the invariant planes do rotate through the same angle in the same time interval. Such equi-angled double rotations are called [[w:SO(4)#Isoclinic_rotations|isoclinic]], also [[w:William_Kingdon_Clifford|Clifford]] displacements.
The 16-cell is the simplest possible frame in which to [[16-cell#Rotations|observe 4-dimensional rotations]] because its characteristic isoclinic rotations feature a single pair of invariant rotation planes. In the 16-cell an isoclinic rotation by 90° in any pair of invariant completely orthogonal square central planes takes every square central plane to its completely orthogonal square central plane in a twisting displacment, as they tilt sideways 90° into each other's plane while rotating 90° internally. All the vertices move at once on separate circular [[w:Geodesic|geodesics]], displaced 90° in 8 orthogonal directions, and the rigid 16-cell assumes a new orientation in 4-space. When the 90° isoclinic rotation is continued in the same rotational direction through an additional 90°, each vertex is again displaced 90°, but from the new orientation in a direction orthogonal to its first 90° displacement. After 360° of rotation each vertex reaches its antipodal position.
The trajectory of each vertex over each 90° isoclinic rotational displacement is a one-eighth segment of its geodesic orbit. Its entire orbit traces a circular helix in 4-space, and also traces a great circle twice in one of the two moving invariant rotation planes. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions just once and returns to its original position, and the 16-cell returns to its original orientation.
== Hypercubes ==
The long diameter of the unit-edge [[W:Hypercube|hypercube]] of dimension <small><math>n</math></small> is <small><math>\sqrt{n}</math></small>, so the unit-edge [[w:Tesseract|4-hypercube, the 16-point (8-cell) tesseract,]] has chords:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{1},r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3=\sqrt{3},r_4=\sqrt{4}</math>
Uniquely in its 4-dimensional case, the hypercube's edge length equals its radius, like the hexagon. We call such polytopes ''radially equilateral'', because they can be constructed from equilateral triangles which meet at their center, each contributing two radii and an edge. The cuboctahedron and the 24-cell are also radially equilateral.
The [[W:Tesseract|tesseract]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {4,3,3}. It has 16 vertices, 32 edges, 24 square faces, and 8 cube cells. It is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube.
The tesseract is the [[W:Dual polytope|dual polytope]] of the 16-cell. They have the same Petrie polygon, the regular octagon, but the tesseract contains 2 disjoint instances and 4 distinct instances of the skew octagon. We can construct the tesseract the way we constructed the 16-cell. Because the tesseract has 16 vertices we will need two planar octagons to start, and we must embedded them in 4-space as completely orthogonal planes that intersect at only one point, their common center. Because the tesseract is radially equilateral (unlike the 16-cell), to build a unit-radius tesseract we start with our original octagon of unit-edge length, rather than the octagon of edge length <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> that we needed to build the unit-radius 16-cell.
For our tesseract construction we skew each planar octagon into a cube, so we have a compound of two completely orthogonal cubes. Provided the planes were completely orthogonal in 4-space and we skewed them both the same way, the 16 vertices will be the vertices of a tesseract with half of its 32 edges missing.
The 16-point tesseract is the convex hull of a compound of two 8-point 16-cells, in exact dimensional analogy to the way the 8-point cube is the convex hull of a [[W:Stellated octahedron|compound of two regular 4-point tetrahedra]]. The [[W:Demihypercube|demihypercubes]] occupy alternate vertices of the hypercubes. The diagonals of the square faces of the unit-radius tesseract are the <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges of two unit-radius 16-cells, which are also the edges of the square central planes.
Because the tesseract contains two 16-cells in alternate positions it has two sets of 6 orthogonal square central planes. Two angles are required to specify the relationship between two planes in 4-space. Pairs of planes within each 16-cell are 90° apart in one angle, and either 0° or 90° apart in the other angle. They are 90° apart in both angles if and only if they are completely orthogonal planes, 90° apart by isoclinic rotation, with no vertices in common and their corresponding vertices 180° apart. Otherwise they are 0° apart in one of the angles, 90° apart by simple rotation with their corresponding vertices 90° apart, and they intersect in one axis and lie in a common 3-dimensional hyperplane.{{Efn|A double rotation in which one of the two angles of rotation is 0°, so that one of the completely orthogonal invariant planes does not rotate, is called a simple rotation. Ordinary rotations observed in a 3-dimensional space are simple rotations.}}
A pair of square central planes from alternate 16-cells are 60° apart by isoclinic rotation, with their corresponding vertices 120° apart. The planes are not orthogonal or parallel, so they intersect in a line somewhere, but they have no vertices in common, they have no 3-dimensional hyperplane in common, and they cannot reach each other by simple rotation. Such pairs of objects are called [[W:Clifford parallel|Clifford parallel]] because all their corresponding pairs of vertices are the same distance apart, although they are not parallel in the usual sense, because they have a common center. Not only the alternate 16-cells' corresponding square central planes, but also the 16-cells themselves, are Clifford parallel objects.
We can rotate the tesseract isoclinically the way we rotated the 16-cell, by 90° in two completely orthogonal invariant square central planes, with the same effect on both alternate 16-cells. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation in invariant square central planes each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions of its 16-cell just once and returns to its original position, but it does not visit the vertex positions of the other 16-cell. The skew octagon geodesic orbits of the 16 vertices are disjoint circular helixes, and those 16 circular helixes are Clifford parallel objects.
== The 24-cell ==
In 2-space we have the radially equilateral 6-point hexagon. In 3-space we have the radially equilateral 12-point cuboctahedron, with 4 hexagonal central planes. In 4-space we have the radially equilateral 24-point 24-cell, with 4 cuboctahedral central hyperplanes and 16 hexagonal central planes.
Great hexagons are a rounder choice than great squares for the invariant rotation planes in which to rotate a 4-polytope isoclinically. The complete hexagonal isoclinic revolution requires 720° like the square isoclinic revolution, but it is completed in 6 chordal steps of 120° each rather than 8 chordal steps of 90° each.
...
== The 600-cell ==
...
== Finally the 120-cell ==
...
== Conclusions ==
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery is more than a formula for the reciprocal of a regular ''n''-polygon diagonal. It also yields the discrete sequence of isocline chords of the distinct isoclinic rotation characteristic of a ''d''-dimensional regular polytope. The characteristic rotational chord sequence of the ''d''-polytope can be represented geometrically in two dimensions on a distinct star polygon, but it lies on a geodesic circle through ''d''-dimensional space. Fontaine and Hurley discovered the geodesic topology of polytopes generally. Their procedure will reveal the geodesics of arbitrary non-uniform polytopes, since it can be applied to a polytope of any dimensionality and irregularity, by first fitting the polytope to the smallest regular polygon whose chords include its chords.
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery of a chordal formula for isoclinic rotations closes the circuit on Kappraff and Adamson's discovery of a rotational connection between dynamical systems, Steinbach's golden fields, and Coxeter's Euclidean geometry of ''n'' dimensions. Application of the Fontaine and Hurley procedure in higher-dimensional spaces demonstrates why the connection exists: because polytope sequences generally, from Steinbach's golden polygon chord sequences, to chord sequences in isoclinic rotation helixes, to subsumption relations in the sequence of regular 4-polytopes, arise as expressions of the reflections and rotations of distinct Coxeter symmetry groups, when those various groups interact.
== Appendix: Sequence of regular 4-polytopes ==
{{Regular convex 4-polytopes|wiki=W:|columns=7}}
== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=1997 | title=Golden fields: A case for the Heptagon | journal=Mathematics Magazine | volume=70 | issue=Feb 1997 | pages=22–31 | doi=10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996494 | jstor=2691048 | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|1997}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=2000 | title=Sections Beyond Golden| journal=Bridges: Mathematical Connections in Art, Music and Science | issue=2000 | pages=35-44 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2000/bridges2000-35.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|2000}}}}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Jablan | first2=Slavik | last3=Adamson | first3=Gary | last4=Sazdanovich | first4=Radmila | year=2004 | title=Golden Fields, Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, and Chaotic Matrices | journal=Forma | volume=19 | pages=367-387 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2005/bridges2005-369.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff, Jablan, Adamson & Sazdanovich|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Adamson | first2=Gary | year=2004 | title=Polygons and Chaos | journal=Dynamical Systems and Geometric Theories | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2001/bridges2001-67.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff & Adamson|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Fontaine | first1=Anne | last2=Hurley | first2=Susan | year=2006 | title=Proof by Picture: Products and Reciprocals of Diagonal Length Ratios in the Regular Polygon | journal=Forum Geometricorum | volume=6 | pages=97-101 | url=https://scispace.com/pdf/proof-by-picture-products-and-reciprocals-of-diagonal-length-1aian8mgp9.pdf }}
{{Refend}}
ictl0pk1f5eb6ehyb0m5pg0a5i2y16h
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Dc.samizdat
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/* Hypercubes */
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{{align|center|David Brooks Christie}}
{{align|center|dc@samizdat.org}}
{{align|center|Draft in progress}}
{{align|center|January 2026 - April 2026}}
<blockquote>Steinbach discovered the formula for the ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. Fontaine and Hurley extended this result, discovering a formula for the reciprocal of a regular polygon chord derived geometrically from the chord's star polygon. We observe that these findings in plane geometry apply more generally, to polytopes of any dimensionality. Fontaine and Hurley's geometric procedure for finding the reciprocals of the chords of a regular polygon from their star polygons also finds the rotational geodesics of any polytope of any dimensionality.</blockquote>
== Introduction ==
Steinbach discovered the Diagonal Product Formula and the Golden Fields family of ratios of diagonal to side in the regular polygons. He showed how this family extends beyond the pentagon {5} with its well-known golden bisection proportional to 𝜙, finding that the heptagon {7} has an analogous trisection, the nonagon {9} has an analogous quadrasection, and the hendecagon {11} has an analogous pentasection, an extended family of golden proportions with quasiperiodic properties.
Kappraff and Adamson extended these findings in plane geometry to a theory of Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, showing that the Golden Fields not only do not end with the hendecagon, they form an infinite number of periodic trajectories when operated on by the Mandelbrot operator. They found a relation between the edges of star polygons and dynamical systems in the state of chaos, revealing a connection between chaos theory, number, and rotations in Coxeter Euclidean geometry.
Fontaine and Hurley examined Steinbach's finding that the length of each chord of a regular polygon is both the product of two chords and the sum of a set of smaller chords, so that in rotations to add is to multiply. They illustrated Steinbach's sets of additive chords lying parallel to each other in the plane (pointing in the same direction), and by applying Steinbach's formula more generally they found another summation relation of signed parallel chords (pointing in opposite directions) which relates each chord length to its reciprocal, and relates the summation to a distinct star polygon rotation.
We examine these remarkable findings (which stem from study of the chords of humble regular polygons) in higher-dimensional spaces, specifically in the chords, polygons and rotations of the [[120-cell]], the largest four-dimensional regular convex polytope.
== Visualizing the 120-cell ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" width="400"
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:120-cell.gif|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point 120-cell <small><math>\{5,3,3\}</math></small> performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]].{{Sfn|Hise|2011|loc=File:120-cell.gif|ps=; "Created by Jason Hise with Maya and Macromedia Fireworks. A 3D projection of a 120-cell performing a [[W:SO(4)#Geometry of 4D rotations|simple rotation]]."}} In this simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges are shown; its 29 interior chords are not rendered. Therefore even though it is translucent, only its outer surface is visible. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 5-cells, 16-cells, 8-cells, 24-cells, 600-cells and its much larger inventory of polyhedra, are completely invisible in this view, as none of their edges are rendered at all.
|style="vertical-align:top"|[[File:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|200px]]<br>Orthographic projection of the 600-point [[W:Great grand stellated 120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] <small><math>\{\tfrac{5}{2},3,3\}</math></small>.{{Sfn|Ruen: Great grand stellated 120-cell|2007}} The 120-cell is its convex hull. The projection to the left renders only the 120-cell's shortest chord, its 1200 edges. The projection above also renders only one of the 120-cell's 30 chords, the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. The 120-cell itself (the convex hull) is invisible in this view, as its edges are not rendered.
|}
[[120-cell#Geometry|The 120-cell is the maximally complex regular 4-polytope]], containing inscribed instances of every regular 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-polytope, except the regular polygons of more than {15} sides.
The 120-cell is the convex hull of a regular [[120-cell#Relationships among interior polytopes|compound of each of the 6 regular convex 4-polytopes]]. They are the [[5-cell|5-point (5-cell) 4-simplex]], the [[16-cell|8-point (16-cell) 4-orthoplex]], the [[W:Tesseract|16-point (8-cell) tesseract]], the [[24-cell|24-point (24-cell)]], the [[600-cell|120-point (600-cell)]], and the [[120-cell|600-point (120-cell)]]. The 120-cell is the convex hull of a compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells, of 75 disjoint 16-cells, of 25 disjoint 24-cells, and of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
The 120-cell contains an even larger inventory of irregular polytopes, created by the intersection of multiple instances of these component regular 4-polytopes. Many are quite unexpected, because they do not occur as components of any regular polytope smaller than the 120-cell. As just one example among the [[120-cell#Concentric hulls|sections of the 120-cell]], there is an irregular 24-point polyhedron with 16 triangle faces and 4 nonagon {9} faces.{{Sfn|Moxness|}}
Most renderings of the 120-cell, like the rotating projection here, only illustrate its outer surface, which is a honeycomb of face-bonded dodecahedral cells. Only the objects in its 3-dimensional surface are rendered, namely the 120 dodecahedra, their pentagon faces, and their edges. Although the 120-cell has chords of 30 distinct lengths, in this kind of simplified rendering only the 120-cell's own edges (its shortest chord) are shown. Its 29 interior chords, the edges of objects in the interior of the 120-cell, are not rendered, so interior objects are not visible at all.
Visualizing the complete interior of the 600-vertex 120-cell in a single image is impractical because of its complexity. Only four 120-cell edges are incident at each vertex, but [[120-cell#Chords|600 chords (of all 30 lengths)]] are incident at ''each'' vertex.
== Compounds in the 120-cell ==
The 8-point (16-cell), not the 5-point (5-cell), is the smallest building block; it compounds to every larger regular 4-polytope. The 5-point (5-cell) does compound to the 600-point (120-cell), but it does not fit into any smaller regular 4-polytope.
The 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 2 in the 16-point (8-cell), and by 3 in the 24-point (24-cell). The 16-point (8-cell) compounds in the 24-point (24-cell) by 3 non-disjoint instances of itself, with each of the 24 vertices shared by two 16-point (8-cells). The 24-point (24-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell), and the 120-point (600-cell) compounds by 5 disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell).
The 24-point (24-cell) also compounds by <math>5^2</math> non-disjoint instances of itself in the 120-point (600-cell); it compounds in 5 disjoint instances of itself, 10 (not 5) different ways. Whichever set of 5 disjoint 24-point (24-cells) are assembled, the resulting 120-point (600-cell) contains 25 distinct 24-point (24-cells), not just 5 (or 10). This implies that 15 disjoint 8-point (16-cells) will construct a 120-point (600-cell), which will contain 75 distinct 8-point (16-cells).
The 600-point (120-cell) is 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), just 2 different ways (not 5 or 10 ways), so it is 10 distinct 120-point (600-cells). This implies that the 8-point (16-cell) compounds by 3 times <math>5^2</math> (75) disjoint instances of itself in the 600-point (120-cell), which contains <math>3^2</math> times <math>5^2</math> (225) distinct instances of the 24-point (24-cell), and <math>3^3</math> times <math>5^2</math> (675) distinct instances of the 8-point (16-cell).
These facts were discovered painstakingly by various researchers, and no one has found a general rule governing subsumption relations among regular polytopes. The reasons for some of their numeric incidence relations are far from obvious. [[W:Pieter Hendrik Schoute|Schoute]] was the first to see that the 120-point (600-cell) is a compound of 5 24-point (24-cells) ''10 different ways'', and after he saw it a hundred years lapsed until Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne proved his result, and showed why.{{Sfn|Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, Butler & Claiborne|2020|loc=''The geometry of H4 polytopes''}}
So much for the compounds of 16-cells. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. That stellated compound (without its convex hull of 120-cell edges) is the [[w:Great_grand_stellated_120-cell|great grand stellated 120-cell]] illustrated above, the final regular [[W:Stellation|stellation]] of the 120-cell, and the only [[W:Schläfli-Hess polychoron|regular star 4-polytope]] to have the 120-cell for its convex hull. The edges of the great grand stellated 120-cell are <math>\phi^6</math> as long as those of its 120-cell [[W:List of polyhedral stellations#Stellation process|stellation core]] deep inside.
The compound of 120 disjoint 5-point (5-cells) can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells), as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point (600-cell), expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell, by adding 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point (600-cells): a 120-cell.
== Thirty distinguished distances ==
The 30 numbers listed in the table are all-important in Euclidean geometry. A case can be made on symmetry grounds that their squares are the 30 most important numbers between 0 and 4. The 30 rows of the table are the 30 distinct [[120-cell#Geodesic rectangles|chord lengths of the unit-radius 120-cell]], the largest regular convex 4-polytope. Since the 120-cell subsumes all smaller regular polytopes, its 30 chords are the complete chord set of all the regular polytopes that can be constructed in the first four dimensions of Euclidean space, except for regular polygons of more than 15 sides.
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;text-align:center"
!rowspan=2|<math>c_t</math>
!rowspan=2|arc
!rowspan=2|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{n}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|<math>\left\{p\right\}</math>
!rowspan=2|<small><math>m\left\{\frac{k}{d}\right\}</math></small>
!rowspan=2|Steinbach roots
!colspan=7|Chord lengths of the unit 120-cell
|-
!colspan=5|unit-radius length <math>c_t</math>
!colspan=2|unit-edge length <math>c_t/c_1</math><br>in 120-cell of radius <math>c_8=\sqrt{2}\phi^2</math>
|-
|<small><math>c_{1,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>15.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{30\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{4,1}-c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.270091</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^4}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.072949}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>25.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{15\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(c_{18,1}-c_{4,1}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{3-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.437016</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} \phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.190983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{3,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>36{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{10\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>3 \left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right) c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(\sqrt{5}-1\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>0.618034</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.381966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.28825</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>41.4{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.707107</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.61803</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{5,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>44.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>2 \left\{\frac{15}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{2,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.756934</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}}{\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2 \phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.572949}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>2.80252</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{6,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>49.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{17}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{5-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.831254</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5}}{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.690983}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.07768</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{7,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>56.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>0.93913</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{0.881966}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>3.47709</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>60{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{6\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>1.</math></small>
|<small><math>1</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.70246</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{9,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>66.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{2 \phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}-\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.09132</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{\phi }}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\chi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^3}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.04057</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{10,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>69.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2 \sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.14412</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi }{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>4.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{11,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>72{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{6}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{5\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.17557</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3-\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.38197}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \sqrt{3-\phi } \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.3525</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>75.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{24}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.22474</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.53457</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{13,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>81.1{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.30038</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{9-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(9-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>4.8146</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{14,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>84.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{40}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi } c_{8,1}}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{1+\sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.345</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi }}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\sqrt{5} \phi }{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt[4]{5} \sqrt{\phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>4.9798</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{15,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>90.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{4\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{4,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.41421</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.23607</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{16,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>95.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{29}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.4802</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.19098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(11-\sqrt{5}\right)} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>5.48037</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{17,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>98.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{31}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.51954</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{7+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(7+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\psi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.62605</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{18,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>104.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{8}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{4}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.58114</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{5} \sqrt{\phi ^4}</math></small>
|<small><math>5.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{19,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>108.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{9}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{10}{3}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>c_{3,1}+c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.61803</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{1+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>5.9907</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{20,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>110.2{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.64042</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13-\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13-\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.69098}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\phi ^2}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.07359</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{21,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>113.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{60}{19}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.67601</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\chi }{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.20537</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{22,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>120{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{10}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{3\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.73205</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{6} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.41285</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{23,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>124.0{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{120}{41}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{\phi }+\frac{5}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{5}{2}+\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.7658</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4-\frac{\psi }{2 \phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.11803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\chi \phi ^5}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.53779</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{24,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>130.9{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{20}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.81907</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{11+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(11+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.30902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{\sqrt{5}}{\phi }}</math></small>
|<small><math>6.73503</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{25,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>135.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{11}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{7+3 \sqrt{5}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.85123</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\phi ^2}{\sqrt{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{\phi ^4}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.42705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^4</math></small>
|<small><math>6.8541</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{26,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>138.6{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{12}{5}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.87083</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.5}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{7} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>6.92667</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{27,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>144{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{12}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{5}{2}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{2} \left(5+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.90211</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\phi +2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{2+\phi }</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.61803}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{2 \phi +4}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.0425</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{28,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>154.8{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{13}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}} c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>1.95167</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{\sqrt{13+\sqrt{5}}}{2}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{1}{4} \left(13+\sqrt{5}\right)}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.80902}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi ^2 \sqrt{8-\frac{1}{\phi ^2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>7.22598</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{29,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>164.5{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{14}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math></math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{15}{7}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\phi c_{12,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \left(1+\sqrt{5}\right)</math></small>
|<small><math>1.98168</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} \phi </math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{\frac{3 \phi ^2}{2}}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3.92705}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{3} \phi ^3</math></small>
|<small><math>7.33708</math></small>
|-
|<small><math>c_{30,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>180{}^{\circ}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{\frac{30}{15}\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>\left\{2\right\}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 c_{8,1}</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.</math></small>
|<small><math>2</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4}</math></small>
|<small><math>\sqrt{4.}</math></small>
|<small><math>2 \sqrt{2} \phi ^2</math></small>
|<small><math>7.40492</math></small>
|-
|rowspan=4 colspan=6|
|rowspan=4 colspan=4|
<small><math>\phi</math></small> is the golden ratio:<br>
<small><math>\phi ^2-\phi -1=0</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }+1=\phi</math></small>, and: <small><math>\phi+1=\phi^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>\frac{1}{\phi }::1::\phi ::\phi ^2</math></small><br>
<small><math>1/\phi</math></small> and <small><math>\phi</math></small> are the golden sections of <small><math>\sqrt{5}</math></small>:<br>
<small><math>\phi +\frac{1}{\phi }=\sqrt{5}</math></small>
|colspan=2|<small><math>\phi = (\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>1.618034</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\chi = (3\sqrt{5} + 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>3.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = (3\sqrt{5} - 1)/2</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|-
|colspan=2|<small><math>\psi = 11/\chi = 22/(3\sqrt{5} + 1)</math></small>
|<small><math>2.854102</math></small>
|}
...
== The 8-point regular polytopes ==
In 2-space we have the regular 8-point octagon, in 3-space the regular 8-point cube, and in 4-space the regular 8-point [[16-cell]].
A planar octagon with edges of unit length has chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.84776,r_3=1+\sqrt{2} \approx 2.41421,r_4=\sqrt{4 + \sqrt{8}} \approx 2.61313</math>
The chord ratio <math>r_3=1+\sqrt{2}</math> is a geometrical proportion, the [[W:Silver ratio|silver ratio]]. Fontaine and Hurley's procedure for obtaining the reciprocal of a chord tells us that:
:<math>r_3-r_1-r_1=1/r_3 \approx 0.41421</math>
Note that <math>1/r_3=\sqrt{2}-1=r_3-2</math>.
If we embed this planar octagon in 3-space, we can make it skew, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from three others instead of two others, so we obtain a unit-edge cube with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1, r_2=\sqrt{2}, r_3=\sqrt{3}, r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
If we embed this cube in 4-space, we can skew it some more, repositioning its vertices so that each is one unit-edge length distant from six others instead of three others, so we obtain a unit-edge 4-polytope with chords of length:
:<math>r_1=1,r_2=1,r_3=1,r_4=\sqrt{2}</math>
All of its chords except its long diameters are the same unit length as its edge. In fact they are its 24 edges, and it is a 16-cell of radius <small><math>1/\sqrt{2}</math></small>.
[[File:octagon16cell.png|thumb|Orthogonal projection of a regular 16-cell to the [[16-cell#Projections|B<sub>4</sub> Coxeter plane]]. Only its edges are shown; its long diameter chords are not drawn. All 24 edges are the same length. Only the edges of the two disjoint squares lie parallel to the projection plane, in completely orthogonal central planes.]]
The [[16-cell]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {3,3,4}. It has 8 vertices, 24 edges, 32 equilateral triangle faces, and 16 regular tetrahedron cells. It is the [[16-cell#Octahedral dipyramid|four-dimensional analogue of the octahedron]], and each of its four orthogonal central hyperplanes is an octahedron.
The only planar regular polygons found in the 16-cell are face triangles and central plane squares, but the 16-cell also contains a regular skew octagon, its [[W:Petrie polygon|Petrie polygon]]. The chords of this regular octagon, which lies skew in 4-space, are those given above for the 16-cell, as opposed to those for the cube or the regular octagon in the plane. The 16-cell has 6 such Petrie octagons, which share the same 8 vertices but have distinct sets of 8 edges each.
The regular octad has higher symmetry in 4-space than it does in 2-space. The 16-cell is the 4-orthoplex, the simplest regular 4-polytope after the [[5-cell|4-simplex]]. All the larger regular 4-polytopes, including the 120-cell, are compounds of the 16-cell. The regular octagon exhibits this high symmetry only when embedded in 4-space at the vertices of the 16-cell.
The 16-cell constitutes an [[W:Orthonormal basis|orthonormal basis]] for the choice of a 4-dimensional Cartesian reference frame, because its vertices define four orthogonal axes. The eight vertices of a unit-radius 16-cell are (±1, 0, 0, 0), (0, ±1, 0, 0), (0, 0, ±1, 0), (0, 0, 0, ±1). All vertices are connected by <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges except opposite pairs.
The vertex coordinates of the 16-cell form 6 central squares lying in 6 pairwise [[W:Orthogonal|orthogonal]] coordinate planes. Great squares in ''opposite'' planes that do not share an axis (e.g. in the ''xy'' and ''wz'' planes) are completely disjoint (they do not intersect at any vertices). These planes are [[W:Completely orthogonal|completely orthogonal]].{{Efn|name=Six orthogonal planes of the Cartesian basis}}
Since this unit-radius coordinate system is convenient, let us derive the unit-radius 16-cell by skewing a unit-radius planar octagon, which has chords of length:
:<math>r_1 \approx 0.76537,r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3= \approx 1.84774,r_4=2</math>
We will need a planar octagon with rigid <math>r_2</math> chords, rather than one with rigid <math>r_1</math> edges. The octagon's <math>r_2</math> chords form two disjoint squares, which we can reposition in 3-space to form a cube by making them parallel, and in 4-space to form a 16-cell by making them completely orthogonal.
[[W:Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space|Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space]] can be seen as the composition of two 2-dimensional rotations in completely orthogonal planes. The general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation in pairs of completely orthogonal planes. Two completely orthogonal planes are called invariant planes of the rotation when all points in the plane rotate on circles that remain in the plane, even as the whole plane tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) into another plane. The two completely orthogonal rotations of each plane (like a wheel, and like a coin flipping) are simultaneous but independent, in that they are not geometrically constrained to turn at the same rate. However, the most circular kind of rotation (as opposed to an elliptical double rotation of a rigid spherical object) occurs when the invariant planes do rotate through the same angle in the same time interval. Such equi-angled double rotations are called [[w:SO(4)#Isoclinic_rotations|isoclinic]], also [[w:William_Kingdon_Clifford|Clifford]] displacements.
The 16-cell is the simplest possible frame in which to [[16-cell#Rotations|observe 4-dimensional rotations]] because its characteristic isoclinic rotations feature a single pair of invariant rotation planes. In the 16-cell an isoclinic rotation by 90° in any pair of invariant completely orthogonal square central planes takes every square central plane to its completely orthogonal square central plane in a twisting displacment, as they tilt sideways 90° into each other's plane while rotating 90° internally. All the vertices move at once on separate circular [[w:Geodesic|geodesics]], displaced 90° in 8 orthogonal directions, and the rigid 16-cell assumes a new orientation in 4-space. When the 90° isoclinic rotation is continued in the same rotational direction through an additional 90°, each vertex is again displaced 90°, but from the new orientation in a direction orthogonal to its first 90° displacement. After 360° of rotation each vertex reaches its antipodal position.
The trajectory of each vertex over each 90° isoclinic rotational displacement is a one-eighth segment of its geodesic orbit. Its entire orbit traces a circular helix in 4-space, and also traces a great circle twice in one of the two moving invariant rotation planes. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions just once and returns to its original position, and the 16-cell returns to its original orientation.
== Hypercubes ==
The long diameter of the unit-edge [[W:Hypercube|hypercube]] of dimension <small><math>n</math></small> is <small><math>\sqrt{n}</math></small>, so the unit-edge [[w:Tesseract|4-hypercube, the 16-point (8-cell) tesseract,]] has chords:
:<math>r_1=\sqrt{1},r_2=\sqrt{2},r_3=\sqrt{3},r_4=\sqrt{4}</math>
Uniquely in its 4-dimensional case, the hypercube's edge length equals its radius, like the hexagon. We call such polytopes ''radially equilateral'', because they can be constructed from equilateral triangles which meet at their center, each contributing two radii and an edge. The cuboctahedron and the 24-cell are also radially equilateral.
The [[W:Tesseract|tesseract]] is the [[W:Regular convex 4-polytope|regular convex 4-polytope]] with [[W:Schläfli symbol|Schläfli symbol]] {4,3,3}. It has 16 vertices, 32 edges, 24 square faces, and 8 cube cells. It is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube.
The tesseract is the [[W:Dual polytope|dual polytope]] of the 16-cell. They have the same Petrie polygon, the regular octagon, but the tesseract contains 2 disjoint instances and 4 distinct instances of the skew octagon. We can construct the tesseract by skewing two planar octagons. Because the tesseract is radially equilateral (unlike the 16-cell), we start with our original octagon of unit-edge length, rather than the octagon of edge length <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> that we needed to build the unit-radius 16-cell.
For our tesseract construction we skew each planar octagon into a cube, so we have a compound of two completely orthogonal cubes. Provided the planes were completely orthogonal in 4-space and we skewed them both the same way, the 16 vertices will be the vertices of a tesseract with half of its 32 edges missing.
The 16-point tesseract is the convex hull of a compound of two 8-point 16-cells, in exact dimensional analogy to the way the 8-point cube is the convex hull of a [[W:Stellated octahedron|compound of two regular 4-point tetrahedra]]. The [[W:Demihypercube|demihypercubes]] occupy alternate vertices of the hypercubes. The diagonals of the square faces of the unit-radius tesseract are the <small><math>\sqrt{2}</math></small> edges of two unit-radius 16-cells, which are also the edges of the square central planes.
Because the tesseract contains two 16-cells in alternate positions it has two sets of 6 orthogonal square central planes. Two angles are required to specify the relationship between two planes in 4-space. Pairs of planes within each 16-cell are 90° apart in one angle, and either 0° or 90° apart in the other angle. They are 90° apart in both angles if and only if they are completely orthogonal planes, 90° apart by isoclinic rotation, with no vertices in common and their corresponding vertices 180° apart. Otherwise they are 0° apart in one of the angles, 90° apart by simple rotation with their corresponding vertices 90° apart, and they intersect in one axis and lie in a common 3-dimensional hyperplane.{{Efn|A double rotation in which one of the two angles of rotation is 0°, so that one of the completely orthogonal invariant planes does not rotate, is called a simple rotation. Ordinary rotations observed in a 3-dimensional space are simple rotations.}}
A pair of square central planes from alternate 16-cells are 60° apart by isoclinic rotation, with their corresponding vertices 120° apart. The planes are not orthogonal or parallel, so they intersect in a line somewhere, but they have no vertices in common, they have no 3-dimensional hyperplane in common, and they cannot reach each other by simple rotation. Such pairs of objects are called [[W:Clifford parallel|Clifford parallel]] because all their corresponding pairs of vertices are the same distance apart, although they are not parallel in the usual sense, because they have a common center. Not only the alternate 16-cells' corresponding square central planes, but also the 16-cells themselves, are Clifford parallel objects.
We can rotate the tesseract isoclinically the way we rotated the 16-cell, by 90° in two completely orthogonal invariant square central planes, with the same effect on both alternate 16-cells. In the course of a 720° isoclinic rotation in invariant square central planes each vertex departs from all 8 vertex positions of its 16-cell just once and returns to its original position, but it does not visit the vertex positions of the other 16-cell. The skew octagon geodesic orbits of the 16 vertices are disjoint circular helixes, and those 16 circular helixes are Clifford parallel objects.
== The 24-cell ==
In 2-space we have the radially equilateral 6-point hexagon. In 3-space we have the radially equilateral 12-point cuboctahedron, with 4 hexagonal central planes. In 4-space we have the radially equilateral 24-point 24-cell, with 4 cuboctahedral central hyperplanes and 16 hexagonal central planes.
Great hexagons are a rounder choice than great squares for the invariant rotation planes in which to rotate a 4-polytope isoclinically. The complete hexagonal isoclinic revolution requires 720° like the square isoclinic revolution, but it is completed in 6 chordal steps of 120° each rather than 8 chordal steps of 90° each.
...
== The 600-cell ==
...
== Finally the 120-cell ==
...
== Conclusions ==
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery is more than a formula for the reciprocal of a regular ''n''-polygon diagonal. It also yields the discrete sequence of isocline chords of the distinct isoclinic rotation characteristic of a ''d''-dimensional regular polytope. The characteristic rotational chord sequence of the ''d''-polytope can be represented geometrically in two dimensions on a distinct star polygon, but it lies on a geodesic circle through ''d''-dimensional space. Fontaine and Hurley discovered the geodesic topology of polytopes generally. Their procedure will reveal the geodesics of arbitrary non-uniform polytopes, since it can be applied to a polytope of any dimensionality and irregularity, by first fitting the polytope to the smallest regular polygon whose chords include its chords.
Fontaine and Hurley's discovery of a chordal formula for isoclinic rotations closes the circuit on Kappraff and Adamson's discovery of a rotational connection between dynamical systems, Steinbach's golden fields, and Coxeter's Euclidean geometry of ''n'' dimensions. Application of the Fontaine and Hurley procedure in higher-dimensional spaces demonstrates why the connection exists: because polytope sequences generally, from Steinbach's golden polygon chord sequences, to chord sequences in isoclinic rotation helixes, to subsumption relations in the sequence of regular 4-polytopes, arise as expressions of the reflections and rotations of distinct Coxeter symmetry groups, when those various groups interact.
== Appendix: Sequence of regular 4-polytopes ==
{{Regular convex 4-polytopes|wiki=W:|columns=7}}
== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=1997 | title=Golden fields: A case for the Heptagon | journal=Mathematics Magazine | volume=70 | issue=Feb 1997 | pages=22–31 | doi=10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996494 | jstor=2691048 | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|1997}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last=Steinbach | first=Peter | year=2000 | title=Sections Beyond Golden| journal=Bridges: Mathematical Connections in Art, Music and Science | issue=2000 | pages=35-44 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2000/bridges2000-35.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Steinbach|2000}}}}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Jablan | first2=Slavik | last3=Adamson | first3=Gary | last4=Sazdanovich | first4=Radmila | year=2004 | title=Golden Fields, Generalized Fibonacci Sequences, and Chaotic Matrices | journal=Forma | volume=19 | pages=367-387 | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2005/bridges2005-369.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff, Jablan, Adamson & Sazdanovich|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Kappraff | first1=Jay | last2=Adamson | first2=Gary | year=2004 | title=Polygons and Chaos | journal=Dynamical Systems and Geometric Theories | url=https://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2001/bridges2001-67.pdf | ref={{SfnRef|Kappraff & Adamson|2004}} }}
* {{Cite journal | last1=Fontaine | first1=Anne | last2=Hurley | first2=Susan | year=2006 | title=Proof by Picture: Products and Reciprocals of Diagonal Length Ratios in the Regular Polygon | journal=Forum Geometricorum | volume=6 | pages=97-101 | url=https://scispace.com/pdf/proof-by-picture-products-and-reciprocals-of-diagonal-length-1aian8mgp9.pdf }}
{{Refend}}
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/* Template:AI-generated */ archive from [[Wikiversity:Colloquium]] ([[mw:c:Special:MyLanguage/User:JWBTH/CD|CD]])
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== Request page creation block for Harold Foppele ==
It was recently brought to my attention at [[Wikipedia:Talk:Ldm1954#Thank you]] that [[User:Harold Foppele]] has been creating inappropriate pages in Wikiversity. He has a long history of this on the english Wikipedia, pages with major problems of [[Wikipedia:OR]], [[Wikipedia:COATRACK]], [[Wikipedia:AI]] which recently resulted in a indef page creation block of him at [[Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#Requesting_page_creation_block_of_User:Harold_Foppele|Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#Requesting page creation block of User:Harold Foppele]]. You can see from the people who responded there that many tried hard to help him and got nowhere. A user commented recently at [[Wikipedia:Talk:Ldm1954#Thank you]] that his actions are a clear example of [[Wikipedia:NOTHERE]].
At least some of his pages here are comparably bad, inaccurate science etc. I am requesting a page creation block on him. I will then ask for a few volunteers at [[Wikipedia:WikiProject:Physics]] to help me curate them. However, we cannot do this on moving targets.
I am requesting this here in some detail as a mention of the block at [[#Indefinite block for Harold Foppele]] led to the response by [[User:Harold Foppele]]:
:The account . [[Special:Contributions/~2025-38873-79|~2025-38873-79]] pointing to this [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#c-Revolving Doormat-20251206155900-Dan Polansky20251106181800|https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#c-Revolving_Doormat-20251206155900-Dan_Polansky-20251106181800]] accidentially pointing at [[user:Dan Polansky]]
: and the non existing accout [[Wikiversity:User:Revolving Doormat]] are acting as one unit.
This sock accusation is a blatant violation of [[Wikipedia:5P]], I have to assume the Wikiversity has some corresponding policies. I have a thick enough skin; as a [[Wikipedia:NPP]] in STEM/Physics I have had people threaten to sue me etc, par for the course. However, accusations such as this towards a novice editor [[Wikipedia:User:Revolving Doormat]] who has been asking me for advice is not something I will accept.
N.B., I would have put in a "Global Admin Notice Board" report but I could not find a place for one. [[User:Ldm1954|Ldm1954]] ([[User talk:Ldm1954|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ldm1954|contribs]]) 20:40, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:<blockquote>However, accusations such as this towards a novice editor [[Wikipedia:User:Revolving Doormat]]</blockquote>
: So you send a novice editor to go after me? The sock accusation is very understandable. <blockquote> I have a thick enough skin; as a Wikipedia:NPP in STEM/Physics I have had people threaten to sue me etc, par for the course.</blockquote> Is that to lay out the ground?
:Did I ever threatend you? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 22:10, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::No one "sent me" to go after you. I am an astrophysicist and a mathematician. It just so happens my field is space and atmospheric physics and dynamical climate system modeling. Before I voted in the AfD on WP I wanted to see if there were other concerns cross-wiki, thus I found your WV article on chaos theory and found the same issues of concern from WP. There's no conspiracy against you, I just want there to be accurate information in educational material. As someone who is creating educational content, as is the purpose of WV, you should be doing the same. Instead, you are writing nonsense that creates work for other editors to fix. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 22:24, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:'''Strongly support''' per nom. A cursory overview of a few of this user's articles reveals the same issues that were on WP, which he refused to address and instead became combative with other users, continuing with the same behavior. Separately, on WV, when much of his created content is coherent and supported by references, that content has been directly copy-and-pasted from WP, which is a copyright violation, and thus disallowed for legal reasons. There is such a massive amount of work to do here both to remove the copyrighted material and remove nonsensical or unverified material, the only possible conclusion is that this user must be stopped from creating excessive work for other editors to have to deal with. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 21:05, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:<blockquote>The account . [[Special:Contributions/~2025-38873-79|~2025-38873-79]] pointing to this [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#c-Revolving Doormat-20251206155900-Dan Polansky20251106181800|https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#c-Revolving_Doormat-20251206155900-'''Dan_Polansky'''-20251106181800]] accidentially pointing at [[user:Dan Polansky]] and the non existing accout [[Wikiversity:User:Revolving Doormat]] are acting as one unit.</blockquote>
:That is actually what is happening. It’s not me, but the link pointing to it. Looking at the history of both non-Wikiversity users, it seems they are a team. Just check their contributions history. The link is genuine; you can look it up. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:40, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::I have decided that I cannot ask professional physicists to repair pages on wikiversity, so I am '''withdrawing my block request'''. You can contact me on Wikipedia if you want to know more; I will not respond on wikiversity. --usigned Ldm1954 on 7 December 2025 as per [[Special:Diff/2778583|this edit]].
: I '''support''' the above proposal (which is obvious from elsewhere, but for the record here). It is now actual physicists (which I am not) who paid attention to the material and indicated it is bad. [[User:Ldm1954]] is "an emeritus professor briefly described in the page Laurence D. Marks", as per {{W|Laurence D. Marks}}, he is "an American emeritus professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern University. He has contributed to the study of nanoparticles and worked in the fields of electron microscopy, diffraction, and crystallography." Admittedly, such identity claims are not so easy to rigorously verify, but I find it plausible/credible enough. As for {{W|User:Revolving Doormat}}, the WP user page says "I joined Wikipedia after attending a conference talk about the underrepresentation of modern astronomers and physicists on Wikipedia, and especially women. My goal is to help better represent my field on the encyclopedia." From that I infer that it is a physicist. Again, a caveat applies: not easily rigorously verifiable. I still find it has some force. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 10:04, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
::You support a non existent proposal. Seems a bit awkward. Also, as a former curator, you should know that you are not allowed to alter/edit an other editors contribution. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 16:46, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
::: While it is true that Ldm1954 has withdrawn the request above, my understanding is that I have the right to resubmit his request under my name, and my post above can be so interpreted (as a resubmission). Moreover, the ''arguments'' made by Ldm1954 still stand. And, Revolving Doormat did not indicate any withdrawal of support for the proposal here.
::: My proposal to the English Wikiversity custodians is to implement the proposal of this thread, with the use of the arguments, assessment and support found in this thread. They may well dismiss my assessment that material inserted by Harold Foppele is likely wrong or bad, but they may perhaps be inclined not to dismiss similar assessment from the two physicists. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:47, 13 December 2025 (UTC)
Since this topic is far above my paygrade, I'd like to defer this to Mike's judgement (when he returns) since he is most likely more familiar with the topic than I am (or at least can provide a more justifiable decision for this ongoing discussion). I would like to advise [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold]] to be patient (refrain from sockpuppetry accusations) and to work with the community so we can reach a conclusion that can be beneficial for everyone. In the meantime, I would think Harold should continue to create any new articles within his userspace, and to work on improving the pages he has already created, but this is my personal view. Perhaps Harold could benefit from an [https://chatgpt.com/s/t_695a96bc0be88191828a623fb059b068 AI overview] of his pages (the example here is for [[Quantum Noisy Qubits]]; maybe have an objectives list and tie it to a bigger course/project?) to see if it confirms with Wikiversity's learning objectives, or he could invite an experienced physicist to collaborate with on the project (which I did suggest to him earlier). —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 4 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] Thank you! The AI overview helps in defining point of views. T tried already to get some collaboration but so far no luck. As for the block request, it is withdrawn. Yet D.P. ofcourse tries to revive it. I invite you to look at [[Quantum optics beam splitter experiments]] for I think it is the best page I ever made. Meanwhile i'm working at [[Number of independent spatial modes in a spherical volume]] based on new insights from 2025 papers.Thanks again. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:46, 4 January 2026 (UTC)
== Google Gemini peruses Wikiversity ==
I asked Gemini: "What is chargomagnetism"? It said (two first paras):
: '"Chargomagnetism" is a theoretical concept that does not appear in mainstream physics. The term and its related concepts, like "chargism," "polar chargomagnetism," "electronorthism," and "protosouthism," are found in a few non-peer-reviewed online sources, such as Wikiversity.
: 'Based on these sources, the idea of chargomagnetism seems to be an alternative, non-standard way of describing fundamental physical interactions. It proposes that "chargism" (positive and negative) and "magnetism" (north and south) are distinct but related phenomena that, when at right angles to each another, create a new kind of "space." This framework also introduces other terms and concepts that are not part of accepted scientific theory.'
: '[...]'
Google search for "chargomagnetism" found only Wikiversity pages. It follows that Gemini is perusing Wikiversity. (Background: I just moved [[Draft:Chargomagnetism]] to [[User:Marshallsumter/Chargomagnetism]], and when googling for the term, Google offered a Gemini output.)
The term "chargomagnetism" is used in 'a polar chargomagnetism separating or dividing from another is called a ray', now at [[User:Marshallsumter/Radiation]].
Searching for the term again, Google automatically provided this output:
' "Chargomagnetism" is a theoretical concept found in Wikiversity's Cosmogony/Laboratory page, defined as a combination of attraction (chargism) and repulsion (magnetism) that occurs at right angles to each other, potentially relating to the separation or division of polar forces, as described in the text. [...]'
It follows that Gemini also scans ''subpages'', not just ''landing pages''. (So does Google search? I just moved [[Cosmogony/Laboratory]] page to user space.) --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:41, 7 September 2025 (UTC)
* All stuff posted here is under a certain licence, as long as the bot owners (gemini from Google, chatgpt from Microsoft etc.) adhere to them it should not surprise. One should always assume that stuff here is available somewhere and used for good... or bad, who knows. I wanted to ask: did that bother you somehow when you posted that comment above ? or what other thoughts, emotions did you have ? ----[[User:Erkan_Yilmaz|Erkan Yilmaz]] 16:11, 10 January 2026 (UTC)
== Removal of curator rights from the following custodians ==
Hi, can a custodian remove curator rights from the following users below? They are already custodians, and having curator rights in addition to custodian rights is redundant.
* {{no ping|Atcovi}}
* {{no ping|Koavf}}
* {{no ping|MathXplore}}
Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:54, 27 December 2025 (UTC)
:I dont know, I would keep it. For example its good for the statistics. Second pro might be the purpose of these functions, but I dont know. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:16, 1 January 2026 (UTC)
::[[User:Juandev|Juandev]], curators have some identical user rights as custodians have them, and the users mentioned here are already custodians. Therefore, for these users, the curator permission should still be removed from them per my point. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 05:29, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:::I see. OK. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:44, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== Adopt the standard bot policy or only allow global bots? ==
I would like to introduce the following proposals related to bots:
* 1. We adopt the standard bot policy, which will include allowing [[:m:Bot policy#Global bots|global bots]], as well as allowing [[:m:Bot policy#Automatic approval|automatic approval of certain types of bots]]. Other bots would still have to apply at [[Wikiversity:Bots/Status]].
* Or 2. We opt-in global bots, but otherwise we will not utilize the standard bot policy. Regarding automatic approval, consensus should decide if it should be allowed here or not.
You can choose only one proposal, or comment here. If there is consensus to implement one of these proposals, it should be ready in two weeks. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:27, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a great idea. I lean slightly more towards the first proposal [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 08:04, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::The first proposal, since getting a global standard would be best. Do you know anything about the Auto archive bot? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:10, 3 February 2026 (UTC)
:::@[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] An auto archive bot would require someone to code it and request it to approved at [[WV:Bots/Status]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 07:27, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:{{done|[[:m:Special:Diff/30065611|Changes requested]] to the stewards}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:33, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
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== Request page creation block for Harold Foppele ==
It was recently brought to my attention at [[Wikipedia:Talk:Ldm1954#Thank you]] that [[User:Harold Foppele]] has been creating inappropriate pages in Wikiversity. He has a long history of this on the english Wikipedia, pages with major problems of [[Wikipedia:OR]], [[Wikipedia:COATRACK]], [[Wikipedia:AI]] which recently resulted in a indef page creation block of him at [[Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#Requesting_page_creation_block_of_User:Harold_Foppele|Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#Requesting page creation block of User:Harold Foppele]]. You can see from the people who responded there that many tried hard to help him and got nowhere. A user commented recently at [[Wikipedia:Talk:Ldm1954#Thank you]] that his actions are a clear example of [[Wikipedia:NOTHERE]].
At least some of his pages here are comparably bad, inaccurate science etc. I am requesting a page creation block on him. I will then ask for a few volunteers at [[Wikipedia:WikiProject:Physics]] to help me curate them. However, we cannot do this on moving targets.
I am requesting this here in some detail as a mention of the block at [[#Indefinite block for Harold Foppele]] led to the response by [[User:Harold Foppele]]:
:The account . [[Special:Contributions/~2025-38873-79|~2025-38873-79]] pointing to this [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#c-Revolving Doormat-20251206155900-Dan Polansky20251106181800|https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#c-Revolving_Doormat-20251206155900-Dan_Polansky-20251106181800]] accidentially pointing at [[user:Dan Polansky]]
: and the non existing accout [[Wikiversity:User:Revolving Doormat]] are acting as one unit.
This sock accusation is a blatant violation of [[Wikipedia:5P]], I have to assume the Wikiversity has some corresponding policies. I have a thick enough skin; as a [[Wikipedia:NPP]] in STEM/Physics I have had people threaten to sue me etc, par for the course. However, accusations such as this towards a novice editor [[Wikipedia:User:Revolving Doormat]] who has been asking me for advice is not something I will accept.
N.B., I would have put in a "Global Admin Notice Board" report but I could not find a place for one. [[User:Ldm1954|Ldm1954]] ([[User talk:Ldm1954|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ldm1954|contribs]]) 20:40, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:<blockquote>However, accusations such as this towards a novice editor [[Wikipedia:User:Revolving Doormat]]</blockquote>
: So you send a novice editor to go after me? The sock accusation is very understandable. <blockquote> I have a thick enough skin; as a Wikipedia:NPP in STEM/Physics I have had people threaten to sue me etc, par for the course.</blockquote> Is that to lay out the ground?
:Did I ever threatend you? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 22:10, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::No one "sent me" to go after you. I am an astrophysicist and a mathematician. It just so happens my field is space and atmospheric physics and dynamical climate system modeling. Before I voted in the AfD on WP I wanted to see if there were other concerns cross-wiki, thus I found your WV article on chaos theory and found the same issues of concern from WP. There's no conspiracy against you, I just want there to be accurate information in educational material. As someone who is creating educational content, as is the purpose of WV, you should be doing the same. Instead, you are writing nonsense that creates work for other editors to fix. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 22:24, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:'''Strongly support''' per nom. A cursory overview of a few of this user's articles reveals the same issues that were on WP, which he refused to address and instead became combative with other users, continuing with the same behavior. Separately, on WV, when much of his created content is coherent and supported by references, that content has been directly copy-and-pasted from WP, which is a copyright violation, and thus disallowed for legal reasons. There is such a massive amount of work to do here both to remove the copyrighted material and remove nonsensical or unverified material, the only possible conclusion is that this user must be stopped from creating excessive work for other editors to have to deal with. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 21:05, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:<blockquote>The account . [[Special:Contributions/~2025-38873-79|~2025-38873-79]] pointing to this [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#c-Revolving Doormat-20251206155900-Dan Polansky20251106181800|https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#c-Revolving_Doormat-20251206155900-'''Dan_Polansky'''-20251106181800]] accidentially pointing at [[user:Dan Polansky]] and the non existing accout [[Wikiversity:User:Revolving Doormat]] are acting as one unit.</blockquote>
:That is actually what is happening. It’s not me, but the link pointing to it. Looking at the history of both non-Wikiversity users, it seems they are a team. Just check their contributions history. The link is genuine; you can look it up. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:40, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::I have decided that I cannot ask professional physicists to repair pages on wikiversity, so I am '''withdrawing my block request'''. You can contact me on Wikipedia if you want to know more; I will not respond on wikiversity. --usigned Ldm1954 on 7 December 2025 as per [[Special:Diff/2778583|this edit]].
: I '''support''' the above proposal (which is obvious from elsewhere, but for the record here). It is now actual physicists (which I am not) who paid attention to the material and indicated it is bad. [[User:Ldm1954]] is "an emeritus professor briefly described in the page Laurence D. Marks", as per {{W|Laurence D. Marks}}, he is "an American emeritus professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern University. He has contributed to the study of nanoparticles and worked in the fields of electron microscopy, diffraction, and crystallography." Admittedly, such identity claims are not so easy to rigorously verify, but I find it plausible/credible enough. As for {{W|User:Revolving Doormat}}, the WP user page says "I joined Wikipedia after attending a conference talk about the underrepresentation of modern astronomers and physicists on Wikipedia, and especially women. My goal is to help better represent my field on the encyclopedia." From that I infer that it is a physicist. Again, a caveat applies: not easily rigorously verifiable. I still find it has some force. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 10:04, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
::You support a non existent proposal. Seems a bit awkward. Also, as a former curator, you should know that you are not allowed to alter/edit an other editors contribution. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 16:46, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
::: While it is true that Ldm1954 has withdrawn the request above, my understanding is that I have the right to resubmit his request under my name, and my post above can be so interpreted (as a resubmission). Moreover, the ''arguments'' made by Ldm1954 still stand. And, Revolving Doormat did not indicate any withdrawal of support for the proposal here.
::: My proposal to the English Wikiversity custodians is to implement the proposal of this thread, with the use of the arguments, assessment and support found in this thread. They may well dismiss my assessment that material inserted by Harold Foppele is likely wrong or bad, but they may perhaps be inclined not to dismiss similar assessment from the two physicists. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:47, 13 December 2025 (UTC)
Since this topic is far above my paygrade, I'd like to defer this to Mike's judgement (when he returns) since he is most likely more familiar with the topic than I am (or at least can provide a more justifiable decision for this ongoing discussion). I would like to advise [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold]] to be patient (refrain from sockpuppetry accusations) and to work with the community so we can reach a conclusion that can be beneficial for everyone. In the meantime, I would think Harold should continue to create any new articles within his userspace, and to work on improving the pages he has already created, but this is my personal view. Perhaps Harold could benefit from an [https://chatgpt.com/s/t_695a96bc0be88191828a623fb059b068 AI overview] of his pages (the example here is for [[Quantum Noisy Qubits]]; maybe have an objectives list and tie it to a bigger course/project?) to see if it confirms with Wikiversity's learning objectives, or he could invite an experienced physicist to collaborate with on the project (which I did suggest to him earlier). —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 4 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] Thank you! The AI overview helps in defining point of views. T tried already to get some collaboration but so far no luck. As for the block request, it is withdrawn. Yet D.P. ofcourse tries to revive it. I invite you to look at [[Quantum optics beam splitter experiments]] for I think it is the best page I ever made. Meanwhile i'm working at [[Number of independent spatial modes in a spherical volume]] based on new insights from 2025 papers.Thanks again. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:46, 4 January 2026 (UTC)
== Google Gemini peruses Wikiversity ==
I asked Gemini: "What is chargomagnetism"? It said (two first paras):
: '"Chargomagnetism" is a theoretical concept that does not appear in mainstream physics. The term and its related concepts, like "chargism," "polar chargomagnetism," "electronorthism," and "protosouthism," are found in a few non-peer-reviewed online sources, such as Wikiversity.
: 'Based on these sources, the idea of chargomagnetism seems to be an alternative, non-standard way of describing fundamental physical interactions. It proposes that "chargism" (positive and negative) and "magnetism" (north and south) are distinct but related phenomena that, when at right angles to each another, create a new kind of "space." This framework also introduces other terms and concepts that are not part of accepted scientific theory.'
: '[...]'
Google search for "chargomagnetism" found only Wikiversity pages. It follows that Gemini is perusing Wikiversity. (Background: I just moved [[Draft:Chargomagnetism]] to [[User:Marshallsumter/Chargomagnetism]], and when googling for the term, Google offered a Gemini output.)
The term "chargomagnetism" is used in 'a polar chargomagnetism separating or dividing from another is called a ray', now at [[User:Marshallsumter/Radiation]].
Searching for the term again, Google automatically provided this output:
' "Chargomagnetism" is a theoretical concept found in Wikiversity's Cosmogony/Laboratory page, defined as a combination of attraction (chargism) and repulsion (magnetism) that occurs at right angles to each other, potentially relating to the separation or division of polar forces, as described in the text. [...]'
It follows that Gemini also scans ''subpages'', not just ''landing pages''. (So does Google search? I just moved [[Cosmogony/Laboratory]] page to user space.) --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:41, 7 September 2025 (UTC)
* All stuff posted here is under a certain licence, as long as the bot owners (gemini from Google, chatgpt from Microsoft etc.) adhere to them it should not surprise. One should always assume that stuff here is available somewhere and used for good... or bad, who knows. I wanted to ask: did that bother you somehow when you posted that comment above ? or what other thoughts, emotions did you have ? ----[[User:Erkan_Yilmaz|Erkan Yilmaz]] 16:11, 10 January 2026 (UTC)
== Removal of curator rights from the following custodians ==
Hi, can a custodian remove curator rights from the following users below? They are already custodians, and having curator rights in addition to custodian rights is redundant.
* {{no ping|Atcovi}}
* {{no ping|Koavf}}
* {{no ping|MathXplore}}
Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:54, 27 December 2025 (UTC)
:I dont know, I would keep it. For example its good for the statistics. Second pro might be the purpose of these functions, but I dont know. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:16, 1 January 2026 (UTC)
::[[User:Juandev|Juandev]], curators have some identical user rights as custodians have them, and the users mentioned here are already custodians. Therefore, for these users, the curator permission should still be removed from them per my point. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 05:29, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:::I see. OK. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:44, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== Adopt the standard bot policy or only allow global bots? ==
I would like to introduce the following proposals related to bots:
* 1. We adopt the standard bot policy, which will include allowing [[:m:Bot policy#Global bots|global bots]], as well as allowing [[:m:Bot policy#Automatic approval|automatic approval of certain types of bots]]. Other bots would still have to apply at [[Wikiversity:Bots/Status]].
* Or 2. We opt-in global bots, but otherwise we will not utilize the standard bot policy. Regarding automatic approval, consensus should decide if it should be allowed here or not.
You can choose only one proposal, or comment here. If there is consensus to implement one of these proposals, it should be ready in two weeks. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:27, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a great idea. I lean slightly more towards the first proposal [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 08:04, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::The first proposal, since getting a global standard would be best. Do you know anything about the Auto archive bot? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:10, 3 February 2026 (UTC)
:::@[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] An auto archive bot would require someone to code it and request it to approved at [[WV:Bots/Status]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 07:27, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:{{done|[[:m:Special:Diff/30065611|Changes requested]] to the stewards}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:33, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
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== Request page creation block for Harold Foppele ==
It was recently brought to my attention at [[Wikipedia:Talk:Ldm1954#Thank you]] that [[User:Harold Foppele]] has been creating inappropriate pages in Wikiversity. He has a long history of this on the english Wikipedia, pages with major problems of [[Wikipedia:OR]], [[Wikipedia:COATRACK]], [[Wikipedia:AI]] which recently resulted in a indef page creation block of him at [[Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#Requesting_page_creation_block_of_User:Harold_Foppele|Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#Requesting page creation block of User:Harold Foppele]]. You can see from the people who responded there that many tried hard to help him and got nowhere. A user commented recently at [[Wikipedia:Talk:Ldm1954#Thank you]] that his actions are a clear example of [[Wikipedia:NOTHERE]].
At least some of his pages here are comparably bad, inaccurate science etc. I am requesting a page creation block on him. I will then ask for a few volunteers at [[Wikipedia:WikiProject:Physics]] to help me curate them. However, we cannot do this on moving targets.
I am requesting this here in some detail as a mention of the block at [[#Indefinite block for Harold Foppele]] led to the response by [[User:Harold Foppele]]:
:The account . [[Special:Contributions/~2025-38873-79|~2025-38873-79]] pointing to this [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#c-Revolving Doormat-20251206155900-Dan Polansky20251106181800|https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#c-Revolving_Doormat-20251206155900-Dan_Polansky-20251106181800]] accidentially pointing at [[user:Dan Polansky]]
: and the non existing accout [[Wikiversity:User:Revolving Doormat]] are acting as one unit.
This sock accusation is a blatant violation of [[Wikipedia:5P]], I have to assume the Wikiversity has some corresponding policies. I have a thick enough skin; as a [[Wikipedia:NPP]] in STEM/Physics I have had people threaten to sue me etc, par for the course. However, accusations such as this towards a novice editor [[Wikipedia:User:Revolving Doormat]] who has been asking me for advice is not something I will accept.
N.B., I would have put in a "Global Admin Notice Board" report but I could not find a place for one. [[User:Ldm1954|Ldm1954]] ([[User talk:Ldm1954|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ldm1954|contribs]]) 20:40, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:<blockquote>However, accusations such as this towards a novice editor [[Wikipedia:User:Revolving Doormat]]</blockquote>
: So you send a novice editor to go after me? The sock accusation is very understandable. <blockquote> I have a thick enough skin; as a Wikipedia:NPP in STEM/Physics I have had people threaten to sue me etc, par for the course.</blockquote> Is that to lay out the ground?
:Did I ever threatend you? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 22:10, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::No one "sent me" to go after you. I am an astrophysicist and a mathematician. It just so happens my field is space and atmospheric physics and dynamical climate system modeling. Before I voted in the AfD on WP I wanted to see if there were other concerns cross-wiki, thus I found your WV article on chaos theory and found the same issues of concern from WP. There's no conspiracy against you, I just want there to be accurate information in educational material. As someone who is creating educational content, as is the purpose of WV, you should be doing the same. Instead, you are writing nonsense that creates work for other editors to fix. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 22:24, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:'''Strongly support''' per nom. A cursory overview of a few of this user's articles reveals the same issues that were on WP, which he refused to address and instead became combative with other users, continuing with the same behavior. Separately, on WV, when much of his created content is coherent and supported by references, that content has been directly copy-and-pasted from WP, which is a copyright violation, and thus disallowed for legal reasons. There is such a massive amount of work to do here both to remove the copyrighted material and remove nonsensical or unverified material, the only possible conclusion is that this user must be stopped from creating excessive work for other editors to have to deal with. [[User:Revolving Doormat|Revolving Doormat]] ([[User talk:Revolving Doormat|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Revolving Doormat|contribs]]) 21:05, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
:<blockquote>The account . [[Special:Contributions/~2025-38873-79|~2025-38873-79]] pointing to this [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action#c-Revolving Doormat-20251206155900-Dan Polansky20251106181800|https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action#c-Revolving_Doormat-20251206155900-'''Dan_Polansky'''-20251106181800]] accidentially pointing at [[user:Dan Polansky]] and the non existing accout [[Wikiversity:User:Revolving Doormat]] are acting as one unit.</blockquote>
:That is actually what is happening. It’s not me, but the link pointing to it. Looking at the history of both non-Wikiversity users, it seems they are a team. Just check their contributions history. The link is genuine; you can look it up. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 21:40, 6 December 2025 (UTC)
::I have decided that I cannot ask professional physicists to repair pages on wikiversity, so I am '''withdrawing my block request'''. You can contact me on Wikipedia if you want to know more; I will not respond on wikiversity. --usigned Ldm1954 on 7 December 2025 as per [[Special:Diff/2778583|this edit]].
: I '''support''' the above proposal (which is obvious from elsewhere, but for the record here). It is now actual physicists (which I am not) who paid attention to the material and indicated it is bad. [[User:Ldm1954]] is "an emeritus professor briefly described in the page Laurence D. Marks", as per {{W|Laurence D. Marks}}, he is "an American emeritus professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern University. He has contributed to the study of nanoparticles and worked in the fields of electron microscopy, diffraction, and crystallography." Admittedly, such identity claims are not so easy to rigorously verify, but I find it plausible/credible enough. As for {{W|User:Revolving Doormat}}, the WP user page says "I joined Wikipedia after attending a conference talk about the underrepresentation of modern astronomers and physicists on Wikipedia, and especially women. My goal is to help better represent my field on the encyclopedia." From that I infer that it is a physicist. Again, a caveat applies: not easily rigorously verifiable. I still find it has some force. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 10:04, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
::You support a non existent proposal. Seems a bit awkward. Also, as a former curator, you should know that you are not allowed to alter/edit an other editors contribution. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 16:46, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
::: While it is true that Ldm1954 has withdrawn the request above, my understanding is that I have the right to resubmit his request under my name, and my post above can be so interpreted (as a resubmission). Moreover, the ''arguments'' made by Ldm1954 still stand. And, Revolving Doormat did not indicate any withdrawal of support for the proposal here.
::: My proposal to the English Wikiversity custodians is to implement the proposal of this thread, with the use of the arguments, assessment and support found in this thread. They may well dismiss my assessment that material inserted by Harold Foppele is likely wrong or bad, but they may perhaps be inclined not to dismiss similar assessment from the two physicists. --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 09:47, 13 December 2025 (UTC)
Since this topic is far above my paygrade, I'd like to defer this to Mike's judgement (when he returns) since he is most likely more familiar with the topic than I am (or at least can provide a more justifiable decision for this ongoing discussion). I would like to advise [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold]] to be patient (refrain from sockpuppetry accusations) and to work with the community so we can reach a conclusion that can be beneficial for everyone. In the meantime, I would think Harold should continue to create any new articles within his userspace, and to work on improving the pages he has already created, but this is my personal view. Perhaps Harold could benefit from an [https://chatgpt.com/s/t_695a96bc0be88191828a623fb059b068 AI overview] of his pages (the example here is for [[Quantum Noisy Qubits]]; maybe have an objectives list and tie it to a bigger course/project?) to see if it confirms with Wikiversity's learning objectives, or he could invite an experienced physicist to collaborate with on the project (which I did suggest to him earlier). —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 16:38, 4 January 2026 (UTC)
:@[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] Thank you! The AI overview helps in defining point of views. T tried already to get some collaboration but so far no luck. As for the block request, it is withdrawn. Yet D.P. ofcourse tries to revive it. I invite you to look at [[Quantum optics beam splitter experiments]] for I think it is the best page I ever made. Meanwhile i'm working at [[Number of independent spatial modes in a spherical volume]] based on new insights from 2025 papers.Thanks again. [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:46, 4 January 2026 (UTC)
== Google Gemini peruses Wikiversity ==
I asked Gemini: "What is chargomagnetism"? It said (two first paras):
: '"Chargomagnetism" is a theoretical concept that does not appear in mainstream physics. The term and its related concepts, like "chargism," "polar chargomagnetism," "electronorthism," and "protosouthism," are found in a few non-peer-reviewed online sources, such as Wikiversity.
: 'Based on these sources, the idea of chargomagnetism seems to be an alternative, non-standard way of describing fundamental physical interactions. It proposes that "chargism" (positive and negative) and "magnetism" (north and south) are distinct but related phenomena that, when at right angles to each another, create a new kind of "space." This framework also introduces other terms and concepts that are not part of accepted scientific theory.'
: '[...]'
Google search for "chargomagnetism" found only Wikiversity pages. It follows that Gemini is perusing Wikiversity. (Background: I just moved [[Draft:Chargomagnetism]] to [[User:Marshallsumter/Chargomagnetism]], and when googling for the term, Google offered a Gemini output.)
The term "chargomagnetism" is used in 'a polar chargomagnetism separating or dividing from another is called a ray', now at [[User:Marshallsumter/Radiation]].
Searching for the term again, Google automatically provided this output:
' "Chargomagnetism" is a theoretical concept found in Wikiversity's Cosmogony/Laboratory page, defined as a combination of attraction (chargism) and repulsion (magnetism) that occurs at right angles to each other, potentially relating to the separation or division of polar forces, as described in the text. [...]'
It follows that Gemini also scans ''subpages'', not just ''landing pages''. (So does Google search? I just moved [[Cosmogony/Laboratory]] page to user space.) --[[User:Dan Polansky|Dan Polansky]] ([[User talk:Dan Polansky|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Dan Polansky|contribs]]) 08:41, 7 September 2025 (UTC)
* All stuff posted here is under a certain licence, as long as the bot owners (gemini from Google, chatgpt from Microsoft etc.) adhere to them it should not surprise. One should always assume that stuff here is available somewhere and used for good... or bad, who knows. I wanted to ask: did that bother you somehow when you posted that comment above ? or what other thoughts, emotions did you have ? ----[[User:Erkan_Yilmaz|Erkan Yilmaz]] 16:11, 10 January 2026 (UTC)
== Removal of curator rights from the following custodians ==
Hi, can a custodian remove curator rights from the following users below? They are already custodians, and having curator rights in addition to custodian rights is redundant.
* {{no ping|Atcovi}}
* {{no ping|Koavf}}
* {{no ping|MathXplore}}
Thanks. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 03:54, 27 December 2025 (UTC)
:I dont know, I would keep it. For example its good for the statistics. Second pro might be the purpose of these functions, but I dont know. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 15:16, 1 January 2026 (UTC)
::[[User:Juandev|Juandev]], curators have some identical user rights as custodians have them, and the users mentioned here are already custodians. Therefore, for these users, the curator permission should still be removed from them per my point. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 05:29, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
:::I see. OK. [[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 08:44, 13 January 2026 (UTC)
== [[Template:AI-generated]] ==
After going through the plethora of ChatGPT-generated pages made by [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] (with many more pages to go), I'd like community input on this proposal to [[Wikiversity:Artificial intelligence]] that I think would be benefical for the community:
*Resources generated by AI '''must''' be indicated as so through the project box, [[Template:AI-generated]], on either the page or the main resource (if the page is a part of a project).
I do not believe including a small note/reference that a page is AI-generated is sufficient, and I take my thinking from [[WV:Original research|Wikiversity's OR policy]] for OR work: ''Within Wikiversity, all original research should be clearly identified as such''. I believe resources created from AI should also be clearly indicated as such, especially since we are working on whether or not AI-generated resources should be allowed on the website (discussion is [[Wikiversity talk:Artificial intelligence|here]], for reference). This makes it easier for organizational purposes, and in the event ''if'' we ban AI-generated work.
I've left a message on Lee's talk page over a week ago and did not get a response or acknowledgement, so I'd like for the community's input for this inclusion to the policy. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:I believe that existing Wikiversity policies are sufficient. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and usefulness of the content that is published. This policy covers AI-generated content that is: 1) carefully reviewed by the author publishing it, and 2) the source is noted. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 19:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::A small reference for pages that are substantially filled with Chat-GPT entries, like [[Real Good Religion]], [[Attributing Blame]], [[Fostering Curiosity]], are not sufficient IMO and a project box would be the best indicator that a page is AI-generated (especially when there is a mixture of human created content AND AI-generated content, as present in a lot of your pages). This is useful, especially considering the notable issues with AI (including hallucinations and fabrication of details), so viewers and support staff are aware. These small notes left on the pages are not as easily viewable as a project box or banner would be. I really don't see the issue with a clear-label guideline. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 22:34, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::{{ping|Lbeaumont}} I noticed your reversions [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Exploring_Existential_Concerns&diff=prev&oldid=2788278 here] & [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Subjective_Awareness&diff=prev&oldid=2788257 here]. I'd prefer to have a clean conversation regarding this proposition. Please voice your concerns here. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:53, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::Regarding Subjective Awareness, I distinctly recall the effort I went to to write that the old-fashioned way. It is true that ChatGPT assisted me in augmenting the list of words suggested as candidate subjective states. This is a small section of the course, is clearly marked, and makes no factual claim. Marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading. I would have made these comments when I reverted your edit; however, the revert button does not provide that opportunity.
:::Regarding the Exploring Existential Concerns course, please note this was adapted from my EmotionalCompetency.com website, which predates the availability of LLMs. The course does include two links, clearly labeled as ChatGPT-generated. Again, marking the entire course as AI-generated is misleading.
:::On a broader issue, I don't consider your opinions to have established a carefully debated and adopted Wikiversity policy. You went ahead and modified many of my courses over my clearly stated objections. Please let this issue play out more completely before editing my courses further. Thanks. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::Understood, and I respect your position. I apologize if my edits were seen as overarching. We could change the project box to "a portion of this resource was generated by AI", or something along those lines. Feel free to revert my changes where you see fit, and I encourage more users to provide their input. EDIT: I've made changes to the template to indicate that a portion of the content has been generated from an LLM. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for this reply. The new banner is unduly large and alarming. There is no need for alarm here. The use of AI is not harmful per se. Like any technology, it can be used to help or to harm. I take care to craft prompts carefully, point the LMM to reliable source materials, and to carefully read and verify the generated text before I publish it. This is all in keeping with long-established Wikiversity policy. We don't want to use a [[w:One-drop_rule|one-drop rule]] here or cause a [[w:Satanic_panic|satanic panic]]. We can learn our lessons from history here. I don't see any pedagogical reason for establishing a classification of "AI generated", but if there is a consensus that it is needed, perhaps it can be handled as just another category that learning resources can be assigned to. I would rather focus on identifying any errors in factual claims than on casting pejorative bias toward AI-generated content. An essay on the best practices for using LMM on Wikiveristy would be welcome. [[User:Lbeaumont|Lbeaumont]] ([[User talk:Lbeaumont|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lbeaumont|contribs]]) 15:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
::::::The new banner mimics the banner that is available on the English Wikibooks (see [[b:Template:AI-generated]] & [[b:Template:Uses AI]]), so my revisions aren't unique in this aspect. At this point, I'd welcome other peoples' inputs. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 19:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
== Adopt the standard bot policy or only allow global bots? ==
I would like to introduce the following proposals related to bots:
* 1. We adopt the standard bot policy, which will include allowing [[:m:Bot policy#Global bots|global bots]], as well as allowing [[:m:Bot policy#Automatic approval|automatic approval of certain types of bots]]. Other bots would still have to apply at [[Wikiversity:Bots/Status]].
* Or 2. We opt-in global bots, but otherwise we will not utilize the standard bot policy. Regarding automatic approval, consensus should decide if it should be allowed here or not.
You can choose only one proposal, or comment here. If there is consensus to implement one of these proposals, it should be ready in two weeks. Thoughts? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 16:27, 26 January 2026 (UTC)
:Seems like a great idea. I lean slightly more towards the first proposal [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 08:04, 27 January 2026 (UTC)
::The first proposal, since getting a global standard would be best. Do you know anything about the Auto archive bot? [[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] ([[User talk:Harold Foppele|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Harold Foppele|contribs]]) 17:10, 3 February 2026 (UTC)
:::@[[User:Harold Foppele|Harold Foppele]] An auto archive bot would require someone to code it and request it to approved at [[WV:Bots/Status]] [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 07:27, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
:{{done|[[:m:Special:Diff/30065611|Changes requested]] to the stewards}}. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 19:33, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
== How do I start making pages? ==
Is there a notability guideline for Wikiversity? What is the sourcing policy for information? What is the Manual of Style? What kind of educational content qualifies for Wikiversity? All the introduction pages are a bit unclear.
[[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 02:25, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:{{ping|VidanaliK}} Welcome to Wikiversity! I've left you a welcome message on your talk page. That should help you out. Make sure to especially look at [[Wikiversity:Introduction]]. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 03:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
::It says that I can't post more pages because I have apparently exceeded the new page limit. How long does it take before that new page limit expires? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 16:57, 28 January 2026 (UTC)
:::This is a restriction for new users so that Wikiversity is not hit with massive spam. As for when this limit will expire, it should be a few days or after a certain number of edits. It's easy to overcome, though I do not have the exact numbers atm. —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 15:08, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
::::OK, I think I got past the limit. [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 17:21, 29 January 2026 (UTC)
==Why does it feel like Wikiversity is no longer really active anymore?==
I've been looking at recent changes, and both today and yesterday there haven't been many changes that I haven't made; it feels like walking through a ghost town, is this just me or is Wikiversity not really active anymore? [[User:VidanaliK|VidanaliK]] ([[User talk:VidanaliK|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/VidanaliK|contribs]]) 03:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:There is fewer people editing these days compared to the past. Many newcomers tend to edit in Wikipedia instead. [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 06:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
:It’s a little slow, but I’m happy to know that Wikiversity is a place that I think should provide value even if the activity of editors fluctuates. If it’s any consolation your edits may be encouraging for some anonymous newcomer to start edits on their own! I think it’s hard to build community when there is such a wide variety of interests and a smaller starting userbase. Also sometimes the getting into a particular topic that already exists can be intimidating because some relics (large portals, school, categories, etc.) have intricate, unique and generally messy levels of organization. [[User:IanVG|IanVG]] ([[User talk:IanVG|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/IanVG|contribs]]) 22:16, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
:I'd say it comes down to working hard for Wikiversity, basically if somebody or a group of people will start presenting good ideas and they turn out to be provably stable.
:I even asked Google's "AI Mode", what is Wikiversity famous for? Unfortunately it could not answer that.
:Simply, we have not made Wikiversity famous by presenting really provable stable ideas yet. My hope is that this time might come. Perhaps even this year 2026!
:Hope dies last. [[User:ThinkingScience|ThinkingScience]] ([[User talk:ThinkingScience|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/ThinkingScience|contribs]]) 10:12, 27 April 2026 (UTC)
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Communications Law in Malta
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== 1. History of Malta and Maltese Communication Law ==
{{law}}
==== History of Malta ====
The Mediterranean island of [https://www.gov.mt/en/Pages/Home.aspx Malta] is located directly in the crossroads of several formidable historical forces. The impacts of this are clearly seen in the country's dramatic history, with effects still present in its "mixed" legal system. Situated south of Sicily, Malta was [[wikipedia:Capture_of_Malta_(218_BC)#:~:text=The%20capture%20of%20Malta%20was,Punic%20War%20in%20218%20BC.|conquered by Rome]] in 218 B.C. in the Second Punic War. This forced the small island to be placed under Roman law for the majority of time between 218 B.C. and 1530, when Holy Roman Emperor Charles V granted the island of Malta to the Order of St. John (also known as the "Knights Hospitallers"). The tiny island was then ruled shortly by France from 1789 - 1813 and then England from 1813 forward,<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-17598542|title=Malta profile - Timeline|date=2012-04-03|work=BBC News|access-date=2026-02-21|language=en-GB}}</ref> only gaining its sovereign independence in 1964.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Aquilina|first=Kevin|date=2013|title=The Nature and Sources of The Maltese Mixed Legal System: A Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?|url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/complv4&id=&collection=journals&div=8|journal=Comparative law review|pages=1-38|via=HeinOnline}}</ref>
[[File:Malta, 2010 - panoramio - Bengt Nyman (23).jpg|thumb]]Malta's "mixed system" is based most clearly on the fact that it maintains both civil and common law.<ref name=":0" /> In practice, this means it follows a legal system predicated on both statutes and past court decisions. Malta has been influenced greatly by international and European systems - the small country has a "Westminster" styled Constitution, but does not hold Constitutional Court decisions as binding on any other than the parties in dispute.<ref name=":0" />
==== Maltese Communication Law History ====
Malta was owned by the British as the "Crown Colony of Malta" from 1813 - 1964, a time period that included many critical changes in the modernization of communication. As a colony of the British Empire, Malta was subject to British influence on both the implementation of the modern means of communication, as well as the laws surrounding the regulation of these means.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://broadcasting-authority.azurewebsites.net/ourhistory?utm_source=chatgpt.com|title=Our History {{!}} Broadcasting Authority|website=broadcasting-authority.azurewebsites.net|access-date=2026-03-18}}</ref> This included the creation of the Broadcast Authority, established in 1961 to regulate all broadcasting in the nation.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ba.org.mt/en/about-us|title=About Us|website=ba.org.mt|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref>
Radio broadcasting first came to Malta in the form of cable radio through a private British company called "Rediffusion" in 1935.<ref name=":6">{{Cite web|url=https://timesofmalta.com/article/radio-broadcasting-turns-90.1119330|title=Radio broadcasting turns 90|last=Borg|first=Fr Joe|date=2025-11-11|website=Times of Malta|language=en-gb|access-date=2026-03-18}}</ref> This was especially important at the time, as Malta's cultural and physical closeness to Italy put them at risk of infiltration by the ideas of the expanding Fascist Mussolini regime through wireless radio broadcasts.<ref name=":6" /> To combat this, British Colonial Authorities strategically placed loudspeakers with approved programs across the island, and banned the use of non-wire radio.<ref name=":6" /> The easy public access to radio programs, paired with the auditory nature of the news bypassing the necessity to be literate, caused radio to surpass newspapers as the main source of information to the public.<ref name=":6" />
The perceived danger to Maltese citizens from Italian and Sicilian influence continued to pressure the island and those who ruled it to continually adopt updated communication systems. In the 1950s, Maltese reception of Italian TV signals led the country to first create the television network that would become TVM, and later, the adoption of color broadcast.<ref name=":6" /> The geographical proximity to Italy created a situation such that, when the one-station system censored differing political ideas, the Nationalist party was able to resort to Sicilian radio and television stations to broadcast their opposing viewpoints.<ref name=":6" />
The small nation's reliance on Rediffusion lasted up until 1971, when the Mintoff government decided to nationalize radio and television; this was ultimately not successful until 1975.<ref name=":6" /> This led to the establishment of Xandir Malta, or "Broadcasting Malta," a Socialist-run broadcasting network that goverened the communications sector until it was pushed out by the Nationalist party in the late 1980s. The Nationalist party then established a public broadcasting network and issued "The 1990 White Paper Commitment to Pluralism," promoting pluralism in broadcasting.<ref name=":6" /> The Church and the Government were the first to have their own radio stations, followed by additions in 1992. Radio broadcasting is reportedly consumed by two-thirds of Maltese citizens to this day.<ref name=":6" />
When Malta joined the European Union (EU) in 2004, they were required to extend their communications legislation to meet EU standards, including promoting European and independent works.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=legissum:e20112|website=eur-lex.europa.eu|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref> Malta has since joined multiple international agreements, such that the Maltese lawmakers must ensure that both the law of Malta and the terms of multiple treaties and directives are followed when writing legislation. Maltese communication law is emblematic of the legal situation of many European countries: though the country maintains its sovereign independence, the law is riddled with influence from past rulers, as well as attempts to catch up with technological progress and the ever-expanding process of globalization.
== 2. Sources of Maltese Communications Law ==
==== National ====
[[File:Malta ali 2009224 lrg.jpg|thumb]]
The primary statute governing communications law in Malta is the [https://legislation.mt/eli/cap/399/eng?utm_source=chatgpt.com Electronic Communications (Regulation) Act].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://legislation.mt/eli/cap/399/eng?utm_source=chatgpt.com|title=Electronic Communications (Regulation) Act|date=Dec. 31st, 1997|website=Legislation Malta}}</ref> This statute lays the groundwork for how communications law is to be upheld in Malta: it governs access to networks, authorizations and license requirements, radio communications, and the regulatory framework that telecommunications companies will have to adhere to.
[https://legislation.mt/eli/cap/418/eng Shortly after, the Malta Communications Authority Act]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://legislation.mt/eli/cap/418/eng|title=MALTA COMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY ACT|date=Aug. 1, 2000}}</ref> was passed and functioned to establish the [https://www.mca.org.mt/ Malta Communication Authority (MCA).] The Act gave the MCA regulating authority to enforce Maltese communication law, established the regulatory goals of the entity, and expressed the requirements for members wishing to serve on the MCA board.
The MCA's authority was challenged in European Court of Justice case [https://www.maltatoday.com.mt/news/court_and_police/87626/vodafone_loses_challenge_on_financing_legal_interceptions Vodafone Malta Ltd v. Malta Communication Authority.]<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|url=https://infocuria.curia.europa.eu/tabs/document?source=document&docid=138859&doclang=EN|title=Vodafone Malta Ltd and Mobisle Communications Ltd v Attorney General and Others (Case C-71/12) — Judgment of the Court (Third Chamber), 27 June 2013.|website=CURIA}}</ref> Vodafone claimed that the 3% excise tax the Maltese government had levied on mobile providers was a breach of EU law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mca.org.mt/articles/judgement-court-vodafone-malta-limited-et-vs-avukati-generali-et-case-c%E2%80%917112|title=Judgement of the Court - Vodafone Malta Limited et vs Avukati Generali et - Case C‑71/12 {{!}} MCA|last=Authority|first=Malta Communication|website=www.mca.org.mt|language=en|access-date=2026-02-27}}</ref> The court affirmed the MCA's authority to regulate communications law, ruled that the MCA was acting fully within their regulatory authority, and the national tax to offset interception costs was valid.<ref name=":2" />
Another statute governing communications law in Malta is the aforementioned [https://ba.org.mt/legislation Broadcasting Act.]<ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=https://ba.org.mt/legislation|title=CHAPTER 350
BROADCASTING ACT|date=1 June 1991|website=Malta Broadcasting Authority}}</ref> Where the ECR act was focused on the infrastructure of communications systems in Malta, the Broadcasting Act was directed at the content that was being pushed through television, radio, and audiovisual programming. This Act also established the regulator the [https://ba.org.mt Malta Broadcasting Authority,] which seeks to enforce the statutes contained in the act.<ref name=":3" />
==== International ====
Being an EU member state, Maltese communication law is heavily impacted on the supranational decisions of the European Union. The MCA lists 8 articles of EU legislation on their website divided into 3 subsections: e-commerce, postal service, and regulatory framework for communications.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mca.org.mt/general/legislation|title=Legislation {{!}} MCA|last=Authority|first=Malta Communication|website=www.mca.org.mt|language=en|access-date=2026-02-21}}</ref> The MCA cites an EU directive from 2000<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=celex%3A32000L0031|title=Directive 2000/31/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2000 on certain legal aspects of information society services, in particular electronic commerce, in the Internal Market ('Directive on electronic commerce')|date=8 June 2000|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref> as well as a 2014 EU regulation<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2014/910/oj/eng|title=Regulation (EU) No 910/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 July 2014 on electronic identification and trust services for electronic transactions in the internal market and repealing Directive 1999/93/EC|date=23 July 2014|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref> as controlling for Maltese E-commerce. The MCA cites a 2008 EU Directive<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2008/6/oj/eng|title=Directive 2008/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 February 2008 amending Directive 97/67/EC with regard to the full accomplishment of the internal market of Community postal services|date=20 February 2008|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref> as the applicable EU law for Maltese postal services, and a 2018 EU Directive,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2018/1972/oj/eng|title=Directive (EU) 2018/1972 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2018 establishing the European Electronic Communications Code (Recast) (Text with EEA relevance)|date=11 December 2018|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref> as well as four 2002 EU Directives<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2002/22/oj/eng|title=Directive 2002/22/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 7 March 2002 on universal service and users' rights relating to electronic communications networks and services (Universal Service Directive)|date=7 March 2002|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2002/20/oj/eng|title=Directive 2002/20/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 7 March 2002 on the authorisation of electronic communications networks and services (Authorisation Directive)|date=7 March 2002|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2002/19/oj/eng|title=Directive 2002/19/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 7 March 2002 on access to, and interconnection of, electronic communications networks and associated facilities (Access Directive)|date=7 March 2002|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2002/58/oj/eng|title=Directive 2002/58/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 July 2002 concerning the processing of personal data and the protection of privacy in the electronic communications sector (Directive on privacy and electronic communications)|website=EUR-Lex}}</ref> as the applicable law for electronic communications.
Additionally, Maltese membership in the European Union requires that the country adheres to three principles of EU membership:
# As a member state, citizens of Malta have the ability to uphold certain EU rights in court. This is known as the "Principle of Direct Effect," and was established by the 1963 case Van Gend en Loos v Nederlandse Administratie der Belastingen.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.lawyersnjurists.com/article/direct-effect-of-europian-union-law/|title=DIRECT EFFECT OF EUROPEAN UNION LAW|website=The Lawyers & Jurists|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref> This means that any Maltese citizen or company can invoke European Union communication rights in the Maltese domestic court system.
# Further, Malta is obligated to interpret its domestic laws ''as much as possible'' in light of EU directives. This is known as the "Principle of Conforming Interpretation" or "Principle of Indirect Effect," and was established by the 1984 case of ''V''on Colson v Land Nordrhein-Westfalen.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://employmentrightsireland.com/von-colson-and-kamann-establishing-the-principle-of-indirect-effect/#:~:text=The%20*Von%20Colson%20and%20Kamann*%20case%20established,which%20will%20give%20effect%20to%20EU%20directives.|title=Von Colson and Kamann-Establishing the Principle of Indirect Effect – Employment Rights Ireland|website=employmentrightsireland.com|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref> Therefore, all of the cases relating to communications law in Malta must be decided utilizing a legislative framework that takes into account the directives of the EU.
# Lastly, the member states of the EU must ensure that their regulatory measures are: 1) suitable 2) necessary 3) does not impose excessive burdens. This is known as the "Principle of Proportionality," and was established by the case ''I''nternationale Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Einfuhr- und Vorratsstelle für Getreide und Futtermittel.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://opil.ouplaw.com/display/10.1093/law:epil/9780199231690/law-9780199231690-e1459|title=Proportionality|last=Crawford|first=Emily|date=May 2011|website=Oxford Public International Law}}</ref> This therefore requires that the Maltese Communication Authority and Broadcast Authority regulations align with the Proportionality standards.
==== Regional ====
Malta is a member party to the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/Convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR),]<ref name=":7">{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/Convention_ENG|title=European Convention on Human Rights|date=Nov. 4th, 1950}}</ref> and therefore must abide by the ECHR's protection of freedom of expression. This protection is enshrined in Article 10 of the convention,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fra.europa.eu/en/law-reference/european-convention-human-rights-article-10|title=European Convention on Human Rights - Article 10|website=European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights}}</ref> which states the following:
"Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. This Article shall not prevent States from requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises."
Further, the ECHR established the [https://www.echr.coe.int European Court of Human Rights], which has jurisdiction over Maltese law in Malta-specific cases, and persuasive authority for cases dealing with other member states.<ref name=":7" />
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
==== Hate Speech ====
Malta takes a no-nonsense approach to hate speech, penalizing those convicted with 6-18 months.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=https://legislation.mt/eli/cap/9/eng/pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com|title=Criminal Code Chapter 9|website=LEĠIŻLAZZJONI MALTA}}</ref> Hate speech is governed primarily by the [https://legislation.mt/eli/cap/9/eng/pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com Maltese Criminal Code]<ref name=":4">{{Cite web|url=https://legislation.mt/eli/cap/9/eng/pdf?utm_|title=CHAPTER 9 CRIMINAL CODE To amend and consolidate the Penal Laws and the Laws of Criminal Procedure.|website=LEĠIŻLAZZJONI MALTA}}</ref>, which states the following:
# "Whosoever uses any threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour, or displays any written or printed material which is threatening, abusive or insulting, or otherwise conducts himself in such a manner, with intent thereby to stir up violence or hatred against another person or group of persons on the grounds of gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, colour, language, ethnic origin, age, disability, religion or belief or political or other opinion or whereby such violence or hatred is likely, having regard to all the circumstances, to be stirred up shall, on conviction, be liable"
The Code goes on in Sections 82B and 82C to crim<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/garaudy-v-france/|title=Garaudy v. France|website=Global Freedom of Expression|language=en-US|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref>inalize support or denial of crimes against humanity, genocide, war crimes and crimes against peace.
* ''(''a) likely to incite to violence or hatred against such a group or a member of such a group;
* (b) likely to disturb public order or which is threatening, abusive or insulting
==== Case law: ====
[https://fra.europa.eu/en/databases/criminal-detention/case-law/6700 Police v. Norman Lowell]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fra.europa.eu/en/databases/criminal-detention/case-law/6700|title=Malta / Criminal Court of Appeal / 98/2011 / Judgement / Police vs Norman Lowell|website=European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights}}</ref>
In this 2013 case, a political activist was convicted for the charge of "incitement of racial hatred" against immigrants and Jews for delivering speeches and publishing allegedly racist views including incitements to violence online. Lowell was charged under Article 82A of the Maltese Criminal Code and received a 2 year sentence (later suspended) and a €500 fine.
[https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/garaudy-v-france/ Garaudy v. France]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/garaudy-v-france/|title=Garaudy v. France|website=Global Freedom of Expression|language=en-US|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref>
Being bound by the European Convention of Human Rights, this case is a persuasive authority for Maltese decision making. This 2003 case ruled against French Philosopher Roger Garaudy who was convicted in France for his 1998 book that allegedly denied the Holocaust. The Court ruled that Article 17 of the Convention preempted Article 10 - making his writing fall outside the realm of protected speech.
==== Illegal Pornography and Child Protection ====
The Maltese government has strict laws governing pornography. Under Section 208 of the Code Chapter 9, displays of pornographic material in public places will result in fines "of not less than one thousand euro (€1,000) and not more than three thousand euro (€3,000)."<ref name=":4" /> Section 208 of the statute goes further to strictly outlaw all forms of child pornography and "revenge porn" (illicit photos intended for one person and then used as blackmail).<ref name=":4" />
==== Case Law ====
[https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng#{%22itemid%22:[%22001-57499%22]} Handyside v. United Kingdom]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng#%7B%22itemid%22:%5B%22001-57499%22%5D%7D|title=HUDOC - European Court of Human Rights|website=hudoc.echr.coe.int|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref>
This 1976 case established that while the European Union protects "freedom of expression" in Article 10 of the European Convention of Human Rights, the European Union recognizes the authority of countries to limit this due to protecting the morality of their citizens. The case focused on the seizure and prohibition of a pornographic schoolbook set to be disseminated throughout the United Kingdom. The court stated,
"the Court first finds that the 1959/1964 Acts have an aim that is legitimate under Article 10 para. 2 (art. 10-2), namely, the protection of morals in a democratic society. Only this latter purpose is relevant in this case since the object of the said Acts - to wage war on 'obscene' publications, defined by their tendency to 'deprave and corrupt' - is linked far more closely to the protection of morals than to any of the further purposes permitted by Article 10 para. 2 (art. 10-2)."
This decision showed to member states that while there are certain supranational requirements they must maintain, individual countries still had rights to uphold their individual public morality.
==== Defamation and Libel Reform ====
Though previously illegal, the [https://parlament.mt/13th-leg/acts/act-xi-of-2018/ Media and Defamation] act abolished the crime of libel and relegated it to civil courts. Section 3 of the act states that "defamatory words in written media" constitutes libel, <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://parlament.mt/media/93813/act-xi-media-and-defamation-act.pdf|title=ACT No. XI of 2018 The Media and Defamation Act|date=24 April 2018|website=Parliament of Malta}}</ref> and prior to this Act, libel could be criminally prosecuted.
==== Case law ====
[https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/falzon-v-malta/?utm_source=chatgpt.com Falzon v. Malta]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/falzon-v-malta/|title=Falzon v. Malta|website=Global Freedom of Expression|language=en-US|access-date=2026-03-14}}</ref>
This 2018 ECtHR court decision directly implicated Maltese communication law, as the Maltese court system had ruled against Falzon in a civil libel case for dramatizing a negative story of the Maltese Police Force. The ECtHR ruled that this was a violation of Article 10 of the Convention, due to the purpose of the article being political commentary based on civic engagement, rather than true defamatory allegations against individuals; the Maltese court was thus overruled.
[https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/cuschieri-v-galizia/?utm_source=chatgpt.com Caruana Galizia v. Cuschieri] <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/cuschieri-v-galizia/|title=Caruana Galizia v. Cuschieri|website=Global Freedom of Expression|language=en-US|access-date=2026-03-14}}</ref>
In this case, a woman was sued for defamation for falsely alleging in an independent blog that a politician was an antisemite and had employed seditious tactics. The court ruled that this was not protected speech, as it went beyond mere opinion or political commentary and into character attacks on the politician that were ill-founded.
== 4. Truth, Honor & Tolerance ==
Malta's membership in both the European Union and European Convention on Human Rights requires the country to provide equal protection to citizens under the law. Malta itself has also established additional national laws instituting this.
[[File:Basílica de San Pablo, Rabat, isla de Malta, Malta, 2021-08-25, DD 167.jpg|thumb]]
With 85% of the Maltese Population identifying as Catholic, and 2,000 years of Catholic history,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ewtnnews.com/world/europe/facing-declining-mass-attendance-malta-s-catholics-hope-papal-visit-will-revitalize-the-faith|title=Facing a decline in Mass attendance, Catholics in one country hope papal visit will revitalize the faith|website=Catholic News Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-03-14}}</ref> it is unsurprising that Article 2 of the Maltese Constitution established Catholicism as the state religion.<ref name=":5">{{Cite web|url=https://legislation.mt/eli/const/eng/pdf|title=Constitution of Malta|date=21st September, 1964|website=LEGISLATION MALTA}}</ref> However, under Article 40 of the Maltese Constitution,<ref name=":5" /> as well as Article 10 of the EU Charter of Human Rights,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fra.europa.eu/en/eu-charter/article/10-freedom-thought-conscience-and-religion|title=Article 10 - Freedom of thought, conscience and religion {{!}} European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights|date=2015-04-25|website=fra.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-03-19}}</ref> and Article 9 of the ECtHR,<ref name=":7" /> Maltese citizens enjoy freedom of religious practice.
==== Constitutional Rights to Freedom of Expression ====
[https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Malta_2016 Article 41] of the Maltese Constitution<ref name=":8">{{Cite web|url=https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Malta_2016|title=Malta 1964 (rev. 2016) Constitution - Constitute|website=www.constituteproject.org|language=en|access-date=2026-03-16}}</ref> lays out the groundwork for the parameters of freedom of expression in the country. The first section of the article grants broad "freedom of expression" with the exceptions of citizens consenting to be censored, and parental discipline.
The second section of Article 41 expresses the occasions in which the government may legally impose limitations on this freedom of expression. This includes situations in which "it is reasonably required" for:
"defense, public safety, public order, public morality or decency, or public health; or for the purpose of protecting the reputations, rights and freedoms of other persons, or the private lives of persons concerned in legal proceedings, preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, maintaining the authority and independence of the courts, protecting the privileges of Parliament, or regulating telephony, telegraphy, posts, wireless broadcasting, television or other means of communication, public exhibitions or public entertainments."<ref name=":8" />
The second article also explains that the government can limit the freedom of expression for public officers.<ref name=":8" />
The third applicable section of this article explains the limits the government can impose on publisher's freedom of expression. This first includes the prohibition or restriction of both editing or printing of publications by people under 21 years old; and the mandate that printers and editors inform the proper authorities of their ages and locations.<ref name=":8" />
The final section of Article 41 explains the limits of seizure in response to freedom of expression. The section first states that when the police seize a newspaper that had been used to commit a criminal offense, they are required to go to a competent court within 24 hours to see if the prima facie case of the offense was satisfied. The section states that if the prima facie case is not satisfied, the paper must be returned to its owner. The section ends with stating that, "No person shall be deprived of his citizenship under any provisions made under article 30(1) (b) of this Constitution or of his juridical capacity by reason only of his political opinions."<ref name=":8" />
==== Tolerance and Anti-Discrimination ====
The Maltese government put forth the [https://parlament.mt/en/9th-leg/acts-9th/act-no-i-of-2003/ Equality for Men and Women Act] <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://parlament.mt/media/1050/i-of-2003-equality-for-men-and-women-act.pdf|title=ACT No. I of 2003, AN ACT to promote equality for men and women|date=4 February 2003|website=Parliament of Malta}}</ref> in order to protect the right of both sexes to be treated as equals under the law -- especially protecting women from prejudicial discrimination. While this does not explicitly mention communications law, it does require men and women to be treated non-discriminatorily in every area, therefore including communication platforms. Additionally, in the [https://parlament.mt/media/129409/att-xxv-gender-identity.pdf Gender Identity, Gender Expression and Sex Characteristics Act],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://parlament.mt/media/129409/att-xxv-gender-identity.pdf|title=Act No. XXV of 2024 - Gender Identity, Gender Expression and Sex Characteristics (Amendment) Act|date=12th July 2024|website=Parliament of Malta}}</ref> the Maltese government instituted rights of transgender individuals to legally change and be known by their preferred gender/name, and to be treated in accordance with these preferences. This act also protects transgender individuals from discrimination for these changes.
==== Case law: ====
[https://timesofmalta.com/article/from-bench-is-hate-speech-freedom-expression.1051613?utm_source=chatgpt.com Police v. Michael Leonard Paul Hammond]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://timesofmalta.com/article/from-bench-is-hate-speech-freedom-expression.1051613|title=From the Bench: Is it hate speech or freedom of expression?|last=Contributors|date=2023-08-26|website=Times of Malta|language=en-gb|access-date=2026-03-14}}</ref>
In this 2023 case, a man was convicted for posting a hateful comment on a pro-LGBT Facebook page. The court ruled that his comment under a Gay Pride parade post of, "should bomb all u (sic) freaks,"<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://timesofmalta.com/article/from-bench-is-hate-speech-freedom-expression.1051613|title=From the Bench: Is it hate speech or freedom of expression?|last=Contributors|date=2023-08-26|website=Times of Malta|language=en-gb|access-date=2026-03-14}}</ref> constituted a violation of Section 82A of the Maltese Criminal Code. Hammond later tried to appeal this conviction, but the court upheld the lower court's decision.
[https://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2018-05-29/local-news/Transgender-inmates-win-damages-in-constitutional-case-against-prison-authorities-6736190683?utm_source=chatgpt.com Transgender Inmates v. Prison Authorities]<ref>{{Cite web|url=httpss://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2018-05-29/local-news/Transgender-inmates-win-damages-in-constitutional-case-against-prison-authorities-6736190683?utm_|title=Updated: Transgender inmates win damages in constitutional case against prison authorities - The Malta Independent|website=www.independent.com.mt|access-date=2026-03-14}}</ref>
While this case does not specifically speak to communications law, it does further show the development of the law in treating transgender individuals as a protected class. In this 2018 case, 7 inmates who identified as transgender women sued for being placed in the male section of the prison in accordance with the sex listed on their official documentation. The inmates stated that being placed in this section, while living as women, created a situation in which they were placed in constant abuse and harassment. The Maltese court ruled that the prison system was inhumane for forcing these individuals to stay in the male-section of the prison, and ruled for the inmates, granting them damages in €5,000 for their mistreatment.
== 5.Cultural and Religious Expressions ==
- Put here how Malta is culturally Catholic, look back at the module as to what this should go into
== 6. Privacy & Data Protection ==
For purposes of this section, privacy is defined as “the quality or state of being apart from company or observation; freedom from unauthorized intrusion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/privacy|title=Definition of PRIVACY|date=2026-04-26|website=www.merriam-webster.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-28}}</ref>" Many believe that there are certain aspects of life that should rightly be protected from unnecessary government intrusion. However, this creates a tension between the rights of citizens to privacy, and the rights of these same citizens to the free access of information. This tension can clearly be seen in the legislation regarding this subject in Malta.
'''International Laws Governing Maltese Rights to Privacy:'''
Because Malta is member of the European Union, it is under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). This is a 2018 EU regulation relating to how personal data of citizens is collected, stored, shared, and used. Importantly, the statute not only provides the framework for how this data is treated, but provides the necessary definitions of what falls into the category of “personal data.” The regulation states in article 4 that personal data refers to:
''Any information'' relating to an identified or identifiable natural person (‘data subject’); an identifiable natural person is one who can be identified, directly or indirectly, in particular by reference to an identifier such as a name, an identification number, location data, an online identifier or to one or more factors specific to the physical, physiological, genetic, mental, economic, cultural or social identity of that natural person. (emphasis added)
The legislation speaks in Article 5 on the principles of how this information ought to be processed. The first line speaks to transparency, stating that the “data subject’s” (more clearly defined as a “natural” person), information should be “processed lawfully, fairly and in a transparent manner” in relation to that person. Article 5 goes on to emphasize that all of the processing ought to be done for legitimate purposes, and only processed to the extent necessary. This “processing” is defined essentially as any use of the personal data in Article 4(2).
The lawfulness of this use, or “processing,” of this personal data is explicated in Article 6 of the GDPR. The main points of this Ariticle can be summarized in the following: the processing of personal data must be necessary and consented to by the person.
Significantly, Article 1 of the GDPR states that, “the free movement of personal data within the Union shall be neither restricted nor prohibited for reasons connected with the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data.”
[[File:Surveillance video cameras, Gdynia.jpeg|thumb]]
Further, as a member of the ECHR, Malta is required to protect the rights found in Article 8, titled “Right to respect for private and family life.” These rights include the right to “respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence,” and grants that, "there shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others."
On the European stage, Malta must maintain strict protection of the privacy of its citizens. But Malta itself has a body of statutory rules governing privacy as well.
'''Internal Maltese Law Governing Right to Privacy'''
Maltese law tends to take on an approach similar to the American prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. Under section 38, titled, “Protection for privacy of home or other property” of the Constitution of Malta first lays out the preliminary mandate that “no person shall be subjected to the search of his person or his property or the entry by others on his premises;” provided they have not consented to this, or this is not “by way of parental discipline.”
The section then goes into situation-specific exceptions to this rule in 38(2). These include the “reasonably required” test seen in European law in the following situations:
“in the interest of defence, public safety, public order, public morality or decency, public health, town and country planning, the development and utilisation of mineral resources, or the development and utilisation of any property in such a manner as to promote the public benefit,” as well as, “that is reasonably required for the purpose of promoting the rights or freedoms of other persons.”
== 2. Legal Framework of Privacy in Malta ==
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, & Digital Identity ==
== 8. Right to Reject Information, Clothing, & Human Exhibitions ==
==== References: ====
[[Category:Malta]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
[[Category:Communication in Europe|Law in Malta]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million Euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was admissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and saying that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and regulation of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through showing politics, sports, and displaying Dutch national celebration and remembrance days.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. This event "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was admissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and saying that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and regulation of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through showing politics, sports, and displaying Dutch national celebration and remembrance days.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. This event "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was admissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and saying that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and regulation of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through showing politics, sports, and displaying Dutch national celebration and remembrance days.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. This event "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through showing politics, sports, and displaying Dutch national celebration and remembrance days.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. This event "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and displaying Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. This event "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. This event "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. This internationally recognized event "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression or ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religions and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the mass media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights ("ECtHR"). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR, the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies accountable when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and holds organizations accountable when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that ensures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which ensures that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies responsible when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and ensures accountability by organizations when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies responsible when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and ensures accountability by organizations when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies responsible when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law ensures that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and ensures accountability by organizations when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch courts also reinforce these data and privacy protections and hold companies responsible when violations are found. Overall, Dutch law makes certain that an individuals personal information and privacy are protected and ensures accountability by organizations when the GDPR is violated.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and hold companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherland’s protects individuals right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority ("DAP"), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DAP fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple 58 million euros.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales 8 million euros for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DPA fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple €58 million.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales €8 million for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DPA fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarentees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is uses online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple €58 million.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales €8 million for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DPA fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is used online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple €58 million.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales €8 million for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DPA fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is used online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence ("AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrated a broader commitment and effort to balancing one's freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated pictures. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple €58 million.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales €8 million for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DPA fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is used online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence ("AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The Court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrates a strong commitment and effort to balancing one's personal freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public from harm. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated images. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple €58 million.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales €8 million for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
Another Dutch Festival recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity List is Corso culture.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/corso-culture-flower-and-fruit-parades-in-the-netherlands-01707|title=Corso Culture, Flower and Fruit Parades in the Netherlands|website=UNESCO}}</ref> In the Netherlands, a Corso is a parade that happens annually that features floats decorated with vibrant fruits and flowers. This festival celebrates Corso culture, which originated in southern France and Italy and was spread to the Netherlands in the nineteenth century.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DPA fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is used online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence ("AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The Court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrates a strong commitment and effort to balancing one's personal freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public from harm. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated images. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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== 1. Sources of Netherlands Communication Law ==
[[File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg|thumb|This is a picture of the national flag of the Netherlands. 2005.]]
In the Netherlands, the goal of communications law is to balance the freedom of expression with the protection of privacy and property rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/understanding-media-law-in-the-netherlands/|title=Understanding Media Law In The Netherlands|date=2025-11-23|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24|website=Law & More Attorneys}}</ref> The key principles of Dutch communications law are the freedom of expression, fair market competition, and the protection of people’s privacy and data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Not only does national Dutch law apply and influence communications law, but so does international law. Dutch communications law governs internet services, data protection, government power, telecommunication networks, and more. This section will look into the governmental structure of the Netherlands and hierarchy of laws that govern communications law in the Netherlands.
=== '''Governmental Structure and Key Governmental Bodies''' ===
The government in the Netherlands is made up of three main bodies consisting of a Monarch, the States General, and the Council of Ministers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> There are also more localized versions of governments. As a constitutional monarchy, the constitution governs, and the monarch has limited power in the Government. The monarch's power is largely ceremonial in nature. There are two houses in the Dutch parliament, the Senate (Eerste Kamer) and the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.welcome-to-nl.nl/living-in-the-netherlands/politics-and-government|title=Politics and Government|website=Welcome to Netherlands|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The House of Representatives is regarded as the more important of the two houses because this house can introduce and propose legislation, as it has done with many communications laws, as well as amend bills. The Senate then approves or rejects bills.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In both houses, members are elected. There are 150 members in the House of Representatives and 75 members in the Senate. <ref>''Id.''</ref>
In addition to the Dutch Parliament, the local governments are the next highest level of government and consist of local authorities. These authorities translate national policies, including communications policies, into forms appropriate for the needs of their regions. <ref>''Id.''</ref> They exist in the 12 provinces in the Netherlands and are governed by municipal executives. These executives are chosen by the central government and a council whose members are elected every four years.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Regulatory Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
In the Netherlands, there are many supervisory and regulatory authorities that are in charge of overseeing compliance and enforcing requirements related to data protection and media.
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens) is the Netherland’s national authority that is located in the Hague and enforces the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://noyb.eu/en/project/dpa/ap-netherlands|title=AP (The Netherlands) {{!}} noyb.eu|date=2023-12-14|website=Noyb|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goal of the Dutch Data Protection Authority is to protect users’ privacy rights and to promote transparency between consumers and telecom companies.
The Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media) is the authority that is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Media Act 2008 for both commercial and national public media providers. The goal of this authority is to ensure that media remains diverse and accessible to all viewers, with the ultimate goal being to “support the freedom of information in [Dutch] society.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cvdm.nl/english-summary-dutch-media-authority/|title=English Summary Dutch Media Authority|work=Commissariaat voor de Media|access-date=2026-02-24|language=nl-NL}}</ref> Another goal of this authority is to promote fair competition between both public and private media providers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Dutch Media Authority is overseen by a Board of Commissioners and contains three members.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The National Digital Infrastructure Inspectorate (RDI) has a main objective of ensuring that communication networks remain available and accessible to consumers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rijksinspecties.nl/over-de-inspectieraad/over-de-rijksinspecties/agentschap-telecom-at|title=National Inspectorate for Digital Infrastructure|website=Rijksinspectie Digitale Infrastructuur (RDI)|language=nl|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done through the supervision of technical infrastructure, such as antennas and cabling, the oversight of network security, infrastructure to protect against cyber-attacks, and the supervision of devices. This includes devices such as smart home technologies and Wi-Fi routers to ensure they function properly and are not susceptible to hacking or digital security threats.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''International Source of Netherlands Communications Law: European Union (EU) Law''' ===
Currently, there are twenty-five member states in the European Union. These states cooperate in trade, social policy, and foreign policy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://law.duke.edu/ilrt/int_orgs_5.htm|title=European Union|website=Duke Law|publisher=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands have been a member of the EU since January 1, 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://european-union.europa.eu/principles-countries-history/eu-countries/netherlands_en|title=Netherlands|website=European Union|publisher=European Union|language=|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Although the Netherlands have their own national laws, as a member-state, the Netherlands has considered and subsequently adopted many EU legislative proposals,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=The Netherlands and Developments Within the European Union (EU)|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|publisher=|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> including the below.
==== '''<u>EU Electronic Communications Code (EECC)</u>''' ====
The Netherlands implemented the EECC on March 12, 2022, with practically all EECC implementation act provisions put into place (aside from a few e-privacy provisions).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This code applies to all electronic communications networks and services. One of the very important features of the EECC is its requirement for universal access to fundamental communication services and the affordability of these services. The EECC also focuses on protecting consumers when they communicate, either by text message, phone call, or email.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-electronic-communications-code|title=EU Electronic Communications Code|date=January 21, 2026|website=European Commission|publisher=|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This is done primarily by ensuring tariff transparency, increasing emergency communications, providing for precise caller location, and ensuring equal access to electronic communications for users with disabilities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The EECC’s key amendments include, but are not limited to:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.squirepattonboggs.com/our-expertise/services/regulation-risk-compliance/communications/european-electronic-communications-code-transposition-status/|title=European Electronic Communications Code – Transposition Status|date=July 23, 2025|website=Squire Patton Boggs|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* providing equal access for consumers and users,
* giving access to the European emergency number,
* widening telecommunications regulations,
* establishing universal service requirements, and
* specifying transparency requirements that providers must adhere to.
==== '''<u>Digital Services Act (DSA)</u>''' ====
The DSA ([https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/2065/oj/eng Regulation (EU) 2022/2065]) is an EU regulation that came into effect on November 16, 2022. In the Netherlands, the DSA has been implemented through what is known as the Implementation Act on the Digital Services Regulation (Uitvoeringswet Digitaledienstenverordening).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> This act creates rules for online providers such as providers for social media, internet, search engines, and marketplaces that typically store and utilize user information in some capacity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/about-the-ap/digital-services-act-dsa|title=Digital Services Regulation (DSA)|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The main goals of the DSA are to protect user expression and information, increase user safety, and increase transparency.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref> To do this, some of the main articles of the DSA include:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.deloitte.com/nl/en/services/legal/perspectives/legal-implications-of-the-digital-services-act.html|title=Legal implications of the Digital Services Act|date=November 22, 2023|website=Deloitte Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
* Requirements for transparency in ads and limiting advertising to minors based on profiling
* Requirements for online marketplaces to assess and stop risks involving services or products
* Requirements for publishing transparency reports
The articles of the DSA are enforced in the Netherlands by the Authority for Consumers and Markets (Autoriteit Consument & Markt). The ACM can impose fines and penalties if it finds a provider or platform that has violated the DSA.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eversheds-sutherland.com/en/switzerland/insights/the-digital-services-act-in-the-netherlands|title=The Digital Services Act in the Netherlands|date=December 2, 2025|website=Eversheds Sutherland}}</ref>
=== '''National Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
==== '''<u>Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Grondwet)</u>''' ====
The Constitution of the Kingdom of Netherlands, also known as the Grondwet, is the legal foundation of Netherlands law and is the highest legal authority in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=About the Government|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of the Dutch monarch are defined and regulated by the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/themes/monarchy|title=Monarchy|last=|first=|date=2016-01-14|website=Royal House of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution was first written in 1814, but the version that currently governs is from 1983.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/government/about-the-government|title=Constitution and Charter|last=|first=|date=2022-01-07|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Constitution emphasizes fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the right to receive equal treatment. The Constitution also describes the organization of the Dutch government system.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== '''<u>National Statutory Sources</u>''' ====
There have been two notable national statutes enacted by Parliament that govern and regulate the entirety of Netherlands communications law as described below.
'''(1) Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet):''' The Dutch Telecommunications Act is the primary legislation that regulates telecommunication, including networks and public providers. The Act has authority over a broad range of communications networks and public communications services.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> It mandates that providers protect personal data and information as well as requiring transparency from providers to adequately inform users of any security risks.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''(2) The Temporary Government Digital Accessibility Decree (tBDTO):''' The [https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040936/2018-07-01 tBDTO] enforces the Dutch government’s Cabinet policy on accessibility, which requires government digital services to be accessible to all people such that no one is excluded from using online government platforms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.digitaleoverheid.nl/overzicht-van-alle-onderwerpen/digitale-inclusie/digitaal-toegankelijk/beleid/|title=Cabinet Policy on Accessibility|website=Netherlands Digital Government|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The tBDTO requires that online platforms and apps comply with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), level A and AA.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is done by ensuring that websites and apps have for example “sufficient color contrast in text, descriptive alt text for images, and the ability to operate functions with the keyboard.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Every government agency is tasked with meeting these requirements, and the Ministry of the Interior oversees compliance with them.
=== '''Provincial (Regional) Sources of Netherlands Communications Law''' ===
The Netherlands is a unitary state,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://euler.euclid.int/what-is-a-unitary-state-the-case-of-the-netherlands/|title=What is a Unitary State? The Case of the Netherlands.|last=|first=|date=2023-08-22|website=EFMU: The Euler-Franeker Memorial University and Institute|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> meaning that there is a centralized telecommunications law framework rather than fragmented regional or provincial policies. As a result, national laws primarily govern the 12 provinces, leaving little room for independent regional communication regulations. Most provincial regulations consist of more limited aspects of Dutch telecommunications law such as permits or infrastructure planning. For example, certain provinces, including Utrecht and Gelderland, have enacted regulations concerning the construction of large cell towers and the locations of such towers.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, communications law in the Netherlands is governed by multiple legal sources at different levels. European Union law has the most influential role, due to the Netherlands being a member state, as all of the Netherlands provinces are bound by EU directives and regulations. At the level below, national law also maintains a central role in regulating communications law throughout the country. As a result, regional authorities have much more limited powers, most often dealing with more localized issues that involves permits, zoning, and planning. Thus, communications law in the Netherlands is largely shaped and governed by EU and national law, with regional law serving a more limited and supportive role.
== 2. Principles of Communication Law and Media ==
=== ACM Policies and Priorities ===
The Authority for Consumers & Markets or the Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) is the primary independent regulator in the Netherlands that executes statutory obligations on behalf of the government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> Telecommunication networks and services must register with the ACM if that telecommunications service “provide[s] public electronic communications networks… provide[s] public electronic communication services” or constructs facilities that support either.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/requirements-telecom-providers/|title=Requirements for Telecom Providers|last=|first=|website=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|language=en|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The ACM ensures there is fair competition between companies, enforces communications laws to protect consumers, and fines companies if they are not in compliance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do|title=What We Do|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The main goals of the ACM, which largely reflect the policy goals of Dutch communications law are described below.
==== '''<u>Protecting Consumers</u>''' ====
Consumer protection is essential and has been deemed a central policy goal by the ACM due to the Netherlands' extensive telecommunications coverage. More than 98% of citizens have access to 5G mobile service, and around 90% of homes have fibre internet available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> To protect consumers and meet this goal, the ACM has developed a website to inform consumers of their rights and how to assert those rights.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The website is called the [https://www.consuwijzer.nl ConsuWijzer] and is devoted to informing consumers about their internet, phone subscriptions, terms and conditions, warranties for broken products, and answering questions regarding fibre optics.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.consuwijzer.nl/|title=Information About Your Rights as a Consumer|last=|first=|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Also directly on the website, people can submit problems or issues to the ACM so that the ACM can review and resolve any issues, including legal issues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/mission-and-duties|title=Missions and Duties|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> When investigating the reports, the ACM utilizes a prioritization system where they prioritize the cases that have the highest economic harm and importance to society to ensure they solve the most impactful issues first.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/about-acm/what-we-do/our-powers|title=Our Powers|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> During investigations to determine if a business has in fact violated any of the ACM's rules, such as if a company lacks appropriate data protection systems for consumers, the ACM officers are able to request such information from businesses, demand the requisite documents, raid homes or businesses, and take the data they need.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, privileged information between attorneys and clients stays privileged and will not be included in ACM investigations.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One prominent ACM case occurred in March 2024 against Global Marketing Bridge B.V. due to misleading telephone sales calls for energy contracts. Customers were not being properly informed of the purpose of the call and were falsely misled by the company's sales representatives. Due to this deceptive practice, the business was fined €400,000. This fine was intended to ensure the safety of customers who were receiving these calls and to stop the company from continuing these deceptive sales practices.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.taylorwessing.com/en/insights-and-events/insights/2025/02/most-notable-consumer-law-cases-acm-2024|title=Most notable consumer law cases ACM 2024|date=2025-02-28|website=www.taylorwessing.com|language=en|access-date=2026-05-11}}</ref>
==== '''<u>Ensuring Fair Competition</u>''' ====
Another main goal of the ACM is to ensure that there is fair competition between telecommunication companies. This is because “[f]air competition between businesses promotes innovation, improves quality, and lowers prices.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> To do this, the ACM has many requirements businesses must adhere to, such as requiring that they are notified when large businesses and corporations want to merge, so that they can assess the impact this will have on market competition and either allow or stop the merger from happening.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ACM also investigates any illegal agreements and allows for consumers to notify the ACM of any issues regarding competition.
The ACM's objective of ensuring fair competition is especially crucial in the Netherlands. This is due to the fact that Dutch telecommunications is dominated by three major providers: VodafoneZiggo Group B.V (“Vodafone”), Odido Netherlands (“Odido”) and Koninklijke KPN N.V. (“KPN”).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/netherlands-telecom-market|title=Netherlands Telecom MNO Market Size & Growth Trends, 2031|date=2026-01-16|website=Mordor Intelligence|language=en|access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> KPN is the leader in connectivity, with about a 40% broadband share (earning extra revenue from Towerco).<ref>''Id.''</ref> Vodafone is widely popular but has recently lost around 31,000 broadband users in early 2025.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Odido, however, provides the fastest 5G speeds. Competition among these providers centers on improving network quality and offering strategic bundled services.<ref>''Id.''</ref> These companies also exemplify the importance of the ACM's role in promoting fair competition and emphasize why this principle is so important to Netherland's communications law given the concentrated telecommunications market.
=== '''Prominent Decisions and Cases''' ===
In 2021 a Dutch court upheld the ACM’s finding that Apple, a prominent technology company, had abused its power and “dominant position by imposing unfair conditions on providers of dating apps in the App Store.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/dutch-court-confirms-apple-abused-dominant-position-dating-apps-2025-06-16/|title=Dutch Court Confirms Apple Abused Dominant Position in Dating Apps|date=June 16, 2025|website=Reuters}}</ref> The court made clear that the ACM had correctly found that Apple had unfair payment terms for dating apps, requiring users to use Apple’s own system, and fined Apple €58 million.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This reflects the Netherland's commitment to protecting consumers interests and rights against large companies.
In a separate dispute, the ACM fined LG Electronics Benelux Sales €8 million for illegal price-fixing agreements with large retailers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-fines-lg-illegal-price-fixing-agreements-involving-television-sets|title=ACM Fines LG for Illegal Price-Fixing Agreements Involving Television Sets|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM found that this practice interfered with competition between retailers and led to television sets not being sold at competitive prices, increasing costs for customers.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision made clear that retailers have an obligation to make and monitor their own retail prices and that suppliers have an obligation to not pressure retailers into fixed prices.
The ACM also reached a decision in a dispute between Vodafone, a telecommunications provider, and Aegon, an insurance company, over jointly using an antenna on a building owned by Aegon. The ACM held that Aegon must “agree to the joint use under market-based and non-discriminatory conditions and fees.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/acm-mandates-aegon-accept-joint-use-antenna-site-its-building-alphen-aan-den-rijn#:~:text=Background,joint%20use%20of%20antenna%20sites|title=ACM Mandates Aegon to Accept Joint Use of Antenna Site on its Building in Alphen aan den Rijn|website=Authority for Consumers and Markets}}</ref> The ACM reasoned this is required by the Telecommunications Act.<ref>''Id.''</ref> As part of their decision, the ACM also determined the fee and conditions that would be set and which must be adhered to by Aegon.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the principles of communications law in the Netherlands are largely shaped by the ACM, the country's primary independent regulator. The ACM's policies exemplify the Netherland's broader priorities for telecommunications and focus on two key priorities: protecting consumer safety and ensuring fair competition among telecommunications providers. To protect consumers, the ACM is essential in providing widespread internet and fiber optics access to individuals and allows for consumers to easily submit complaints or reports issues. It also maintains fair market competition by investigating and stoping companies from dominating the market or manipulating price points. The cases discussed above demonstrate how the ACM actively enforces these two principles and ensures that telecommunications in the Netherlands has market competition and consumer protections.
== 3. Censorship and Violent Content ==
In the Netherlands, the freedom of expression is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. However, carefully targeted laws and bans as explained below impose restrictions aimed at regulating media and censoring violent content.
=== '''Freedom of Expression''' ===
The Freedom of Expression in the Netherlands is protected by both the Dutch Constitution (as described in Article 7) and international law such as that from the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
[[File:Grondwet van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden.jpg|thumb|This picture is of the Dutch Constitution (Grondwet). The photographer of this photo is Vera de Kok, 2018. ]]
Article 7 of the [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Dutch Constitution (Grondwet)] explicitly establishes that:<blockquote>1. “[n]o one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 7|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
2. “[r]ules concerning radio and television shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. There shall be no prior supervision of the content of a radio or television broadcast.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
3. “[n]o one shall be required to submit thoughts or opinions for prior approval in order to disseminate them by means other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraphs, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law. The holding of performances open to persons younger than sixteen years of age may be regulated by Act of Parliament in order to protect good morals.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>As detailed above, the constitution guarantees the freedom of expression, meaning that the government may not generally limit or restrict speech.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/discrimination/prohibition-of-discrimination.|title=Prohibition of Discrimination|website=Government of the Netherlands}}</ref> The constitution rejects prior censorship, requiring no prior permission before one publishes a thought or opinion. However, the freedoms in Article 7 are still subject to Article 1, which prohibits any form of discrimination (political, religious, sex, etc.,) and courts still balance Article 7 against Article 1. Furthermore, censorship is not allowed, but in certain circumstances as discussed in the follow sections, limited censorship may be permitted in specific circumstances (such as the protection of minors).<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Netherlands is also a part of the [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG European Convention on Human Rights] (ECHR). As a member of the ECHR through ratifying the human rights agreements laid out in the ECHR, violations of human rights may be brought to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Article 10 of the ECHR protects the freedom of expression, but also lays out restrictions in the forms of one’s “duties and responsibilities” such as restrictions required of a “democratic society” and to protect people’s health and safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> One case that illustrates the importance of Article 10 and the protections it provides is ''Sanoma Uitgevers v. The Netherlands,'' which was brought before the ECtHR in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-100448|title=Sanoma Uitgevers B.V. v. Netherlands, App. No. 38224/03 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=2010-09-14}}</ref> The facts of this case took place in 2002 when there was an illegal street race taking place in Amsterdam that was being photographed by journalist from a prominent magazine in the Netherlands called the ''Autoweek''.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Before the ''Autoweek'' released the story on the race, local police reached out to the magazine and asked that the photographs taken of the street race be surrendered due to the police's suspicion that one of the cars in the race was involved in a violent robbery previously. When the ''Autoweek'' refused, the police arrested the editor and the photographs were released to the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The ''Autoweek'' eventually brought the case before the ECtHR claiming their Article 10 rights, including that of the freedom of expression and the press had been violated. The Grand Chamber ultimately held that the Netherlands had violated Article 10, finding that the interference was not "prescribed by law" as Dutch law did not have the necessary procedural safeguards to protect journalists prior to disclosure orders being enforced by the police.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court further held that "an interference cannot be compatible with Article of the convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest."<ref>''Id.''</ref> Here, that balancing failed and as a result, these actions were found not to be "prescribed by law" and thus, Article 10 was violated.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This decision emphasized the idea that there are important safeguards that protect the freedom of expression and the press and that any interference on these rights must be authorized by the law.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The European Union also requires EU countries to comply with the rights in Article 11 of the [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf Charter of Fundamental Rights]. Article 11 describes the Freedom of Expression and Information. As a member of the European Union, the Netherlands is bound by its laws and regulations.
=== '''Criminal Regulation of Violent Content''' ===
In the Netherlands, the laws that regulate violent content do not broadly prohibit such content but instead target specific types of violent content. For example, prohibited content may include some types of content that may be harmful to minors or content that is aimed at promoting terrorism, incitement, or hate speech.
The Dutch Criminal Code (Wetboek van Strafecht) prohibits incitement to violence under [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf Article 137(d)]. Specifically, this article criminalizes public words, writings, or images that “incite[] hatred or discrimination against men or violence against person or property on the grounds of their race, religion, or beliefs, their gender, their heterosexual or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(d) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> If violated, punishments may result in up to one year of imprisonment or fines. Other relevant Articles include Article [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(c)] and [https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The Netherlands Criminal Code - Section 137c and 137d.pdf 137(e)]. Article 137(c) makes it a crime to knowingly make harmful or discriminatory public statements toward a group of people based on characteristics such as race, religion, sexual orientation, beliefs, or disability.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(c) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> Article 137(e) criminalizes (beyond providing factual information) making statements or distributing materials that are offensive to a group of persons based on the characteristics described previously or incite hatred, discrimination, or violence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://melaproject.org/sites/default/files/2019-01/The%20Netherlands%20Criminal%20Code%20-%20Section%20137c%20and%20137d.pdf|title=Art. 137(e) Wetboek van Strafrecht (Criminal Code)|website=Memory Laws in European and Comparative Perspective}}</ref> For 137(c) and 137(e), the punishment becomes more severe if the person committing the crime has done so repeatedly or if two or more people coordinate committing the offense together.
The Dutch Criminal Code and the criminal regulation of violent content has been considered in the context of the ECtHR as well in the case of ''Glimmerveen and Hagenbeek v. the Netherlands.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-74187|title=Glimerveen and Hagenbeek v. The Netherlands, App No. 8348/78 8406/78 Eur. Ct. H. R.|date=1979-10-11}}</ref> This case was brought before the Court by the Dutch political party Nederlandse Volks Unie (NVU), which supported the idea of a homogeneous population and denounced racial mixing.<ref>''Id.''</ref> An applicant had been convicted under Article 137(e) of the Dutch Criminal Code for the possession of leaflets that incited racial discrimination against minority groups with the intent to distribute these leaflets.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Dutch courts found that these leaflets violated Article 137(e)'s prohibition on distributing materials that are offensive to a group of people based on race and which incite discrimination and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> At the ECtHR, the applicants made the argument that their conviction was a violation of Article 10 due to the speech being political speech.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court rejected this argument and found that the application was inadmissible, citing to Article 17 of the Convention and holding that speech that promotes racial discrimination is not protected under Article 10.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Thus, this case demonstrates how under both Dutch law and European Union law, hateful and violent political speech is not protected speech and the regulation and censorship of such speech is lawful.
=== '''Media Regulation: Media Act (Mediawet 2008)''' ===
The [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/publications/2022/06/14/media-act-2008/Media+Act+2008.pdf Media Act] is “aimed at ensuring that everyone should have equal access to a varied and reliable range of information in all kinds of areas.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/policy-monitoring-platform/mediawet-2008-dutch-media-act|title=Mediawet 2008 (Dutch Media Act)|website=UNESCO}}</ref> The Act promotes competition in the media with both public and commercial broadcasters. The Act also sets forth that the government may not censor media content. Public broadcasters are funded by the government and have to provide educational, political, cultural, and child friendly programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also mandates that content by public broadcasters display the diversity of society in the Netherlands through displaying politics, sports, and Dutch national celebration and remembrance days in the media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/the-media-and-broadcasting/media-act-rules-for-broadcasters-and-programming|title=Media Act: Rules for Broadcasters and Programming|last=|first=|date=2015-07-01|website=Government of the Netherlands|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Commercial broadcasters on the other hand do not receive government funding, and thus are able to adhere to less stringent rules than public broadcasters, but still must adhere to a few specific rules set out in the Act, such as protecting children from harmful programs.<ref>''Id.'' </ref>
Public broadcasters have stricter rules than commercial broadcasters in regard to advertisements as well. There must be fewer advertisements displayed and programs may not be interrupted by commercials. Commercial broadcasters however may rely on advertising, but they may not sponsor any news programs.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The Act has a large focus on the protection of children and does so by restricting harmful content and creating time limits. Programs that are appropriate for children ages 12 and over can only be shown after 8 p.m., and programs for those ages 16 or over can only be shown between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. These time restrictions are enforced by independent media authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Lastly, the Act makes clear that “[j]ournalists and programme-makers are free to write, publish and broadcast what they wish.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> As per the Constitution and the Media act, the Dutch government may not censor or interfere with content in advance of it being displayed.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Media Protections for Minors''' ===
The Netherlands also has a Viewing Guide called Kijkwijzer, that is managed by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://better-internet-for-kids.europa.eu/en/rules-guidelines/viewing-guide-dutch-audiovisual-classification-system|title=Viewing Guide (Dutch Audiovisual Classification System)|website=European Union}}</ref> This guide creates 7 different categories of age ratings including: all ages, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years, 14 years, 16, years and 18 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kijkwijzer.nl/en/about-kijkwijzer/|title=About Kijkwijzer|website=Kijkwijzer|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> It also has seven different types of icons that explain why there is a certain age rating. The reasons include fear, discrimination, drugs, sex, bad language, dangerous acts, smoking, drinking, and violence.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This system assists parents and guardians in ensuring that the media children are viewing is appropriate. Kijkwijzer can be found on almost all Netherlands media, with the only exception being the news or shows that are displayed live as these may not be given a rating in advance of being shown.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
The age ratings also effect the times a show or movie may be broadcast. Media that is allowed for all ages, 6 years, as well as 9 years may be shown at any time.<ref>''Id.''</ref> However, those rated 12 years, 14 years, and 16 years can only be shown between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Lastly, media that is rated 18 years can only be shown at late times, when children would typically be asleep, from 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, the freedom of expression is a fundamental value in the Netherlands, but is balanced alongside protections for public safety. The Netherlands does not allow for prior censorship, however, certain forms of speech such as those that advocate for terrorism or those that incite hate are criminally prohibited under the Dutch Criminal Code. Media regulations are also incredibly important as laws such as the Media Act require that public and private broadcasters adhere to important standards that promote many different interests such as providing educational programming, cultural shows, and showcasing diversity. The Netherlands also places significant emphasis on protecting minors as exemplified in guides such as Kijkwijzer. This guide provides age ratings and content warnings, as well as specified programming times that are more suitable for younger viewers. By having strong protections for free expression and the regulatory policies explained above, the Netherlands is a leading country in showcasing how a nation can preserve the freedom of expression while protecting the safety of its citizens.
== 4. Truth, Tolerance, and Unprotected Speech ==
In the Netherlands, defamation may be punishable under both criminal law and civil law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|date=2021-11-18|website=Carter-Ruck|language=en-US|access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> To determine what constitutes defamation, Dutch courts often look to the European Court of Human Rights precedent.<ref>''Id.''</ref> In the Netherlands, defamation may be in the form of verbal statements (slander) or written or published statements (libel).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.maak-law.com/law-of-obligations-netherlands/defamation-libel-netherlands/|title=Defamation and Libel in the Netherlands: What International Clients Need to Know|website=Maak}}</ref> Under Dutch law, defamation “occurs when someone intentionally damages your reputation by spreading true but harmful information that attacks your good name.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> On the other hand, libel occurs when a person intentionally disseminates false information in order to harm a person. Thus, libel actions always deal with harmful ''false'' information while defamation actions can involve harmful ''true'' information.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Civil Law''' ===
The Dutch Civil Code, [http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm Article 6:167] provides a cause of action for defamation and liability under tort law. Under this article, if a person were to publish false information, a court could order that person “to publish a correction in a way to be set by court,”<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/legislation/dcctitle6633.htm|title=Art. 6:167, Burgerlijk Wetboek (Civil Code)|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> even if the person who published the false information did not do so knowingly.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The party who brings the lawsuit is required to show proof of the defamation or slander and typically has the burden of proof.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> The court has discretion to grant different forms of relief, including monetary damages or requiring specific performance, such as removing a post or statement.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''Defamation Under Dutch Criminal Law''' ===
Dutch Criminal Law, Articles 261 through 271, pertain to defamation and libel. Under these articles, knowingly making incorrect statements that harm another is a criminal offense.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Across the provisions, a main requirement is that of intent, meaning that a person must have intentionally made false statements. Criminal cases typically involve more severe forms of defamation than civil cases. If a person wants to criminally prosecute someone else for defamation or slander, a complaint must be filed with Dutch police.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carter-ruck.com/law-guides/defamation-and-privacy-law-in-netherlands/|title=Netherlands Media Law Guide|last=Kloters|first=Remco|website=Carter-Ruck}}</ref> Typically, for these types of actions prison time is rare, and the more typical punishment is that in the form of a fine or community service.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== '''European Court of Human Rights Influence''' ===
As a member state of the Council of Europe, the Netherlands is subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which interprets rules and regulations from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Defamation and slander cases within the Netherlands are heavily influenced by the ECHR, specifically [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 10] and [https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG Article 8]. Article 8 ensures that peoples private lives and reputations are respected.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 8|date=|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 guarantees the freedom of expression, with restrictions listed under section section 2 of the article.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/convention_ENG|title=Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10|website=Council of Europe}}</ref> Article 10 section 2 makes clear that any limitations to the freedom of expression must be:<blockquote>“…necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”<ref>''Id.''</ref></blockquote>In defamation and slander cases, Dutch courts apply the above articles when balancing a person’s right to protect their reputation against another’s right to the freedom of expression.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/blog/online-reviews-in-the-netherlands-what-is-allowed-and-when-is-it-defamation/#:~:text=Dutch%20Criminal%20and%20Civil%20Codes,of%20annual%20turnover%20for%20violations|title=Online Reviews in the Netherlands: What is Allowed and When is it Defamation?|date=December 29, 2025|website=Law & More}}</ref> Today, 68% of defamation cases in the Netherlands are due to online content given the rise in social media and how quickly a post can go viral. When balancing reputational rights and the freedom of expression, many factors are considered including where the statement was made, how it was made, its public relevance, and the intent.
=== '''United States Defamation Law Compared to''' '''Dutch Defamation Law''' ===
In the United States, there is a strong protection of the freedom of speech under the first amendment. The notable case for defamation lawsuits in the United States is ''New York Times Co. v. Sullivan''. This case provided the “actual malice” rule which says that to succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff (public official) has the burden of proving “that the statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/376/254/|title=New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)|work=Justia Law|access-date=2026-02-24|language=en}}</ref> This is a high standard that plaintiffs must meet in order to win in a defamation suit in the United States, and is different than that required in the Netherlands.
Unlike the United States, there is no equivalent or comparable "actual malice" standard in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, Articles 8 and 10 of the ECHR largely govern how Dutch courts rule on defamation cases. Under Article 10, a Dutch court decides if an interference on one's freedom of expression is "prescribed by law" and necessary to a democratic society, a very different approach than that in the United States. Also, in the United States, the U.S. Supreme court does not rely on international law when interpreting defamation cases, unlike Dutch courts which rely heavily on international human rights law, and instead relies on the first amendment, U.S Supreme Court precedent, and state tort law.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, defamation actions in the Netherlands are punishable under both civil and criminal law, which shows the country's commitment to protecting individuals from reputational harm. Dutch courts are bound by the European Convention on Human Rights and influenced by the precedent of the European Court of Human Rights, particularly Articles 10 and 8. These articles protect the freedom of expression while also protecting the right to a respected and private reputation.
== 5. Cultural and Religious Expression ==
=== Dutch Cultural Identity and Its Promotion ===
Dutch culture is often described as a 'melting pot', where the culture is shaped through the contributions of people from a wide range of religions, ethnicities, and backgrounds.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki> </ref> Historically, Holland and Amsterdam have been major hubs for foreign settlers, all of whom bring their own cultures and customs with them. As a society, the Netherlands is “home to over 200 different nationalities.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The cultural diversity in the Netherlands has aided in shaping a society that is tolerant, open-minded, and welcoming to all people.<ref>Day, M., de Haan, A., Sieckelinck, S., & Steketee, M. (2025). Multiple Cultural Identities and Sense of National Belonging Among Second- And Third-Generation Youth in the Netherlands. ''Identity'', 1–23. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15283488.2025.2564856</nowiki></ref> The diversity is also represented through the many languages spoken in the Netherlands.<ref>Gobel MS, Benet-Martinez V, Mesquita B, Uskul AK. Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context. J Cross Cult Psychol. 2018 Jul;49(6):858-867. doi: 10.1177/0022022118779144. Epub 2018 Jun 21. PMID: 30008485; PMCID: PMC6024379; Lazëri, M., & Coenders, M. (2023). Dutch national identity in a majority-minority context: when the dominant group becomes a local minority. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''49''(9), 2129–2153. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2104698</nowiki></ref> Although Dutch is the national language of the Netherlands, English, German, and French, are very common languages.
Another important cultural aspect in the Netherlands is found in social situations. In general, the Dutch are often very straightforward in the way they communicate, saying exactly what they think.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Although this may come across as rude or blunt to visitors, Dutch communication values honesty and efficiency, where everyone can share their opinions freely.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/education/international-students/studying-in-the-netherlands/dutch-culture|title=Dutch culture - Leiden University|website=www.universiteitleiden.nl|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The Dutch enjoy transparency in their society and sharing their own points of view.
This kind of open-mindedness and direct communication in the Netherlands is taught from an early age. In the Netherlands, cultural values are typically learned and spread through education and early socialization initiatives.<ref>Eva Brinkman and Cas Smithuijsen, ''Social Cohesion and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands,'' Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 No. 2-3, February 1, 2002, https://doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300. https://cjc.utppublishing.com/doi/10.22230/cjc.2002v27n2a1300</ref> Beginning in 1999, the Secretary of State for Culture, Rick van der Ploeg, created a new plan directed towards youths to help them access and appreciate their culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This plan was titled “Aciteplan Culturrbereik” or Cultural Outreach Action Plan. The action plan “stressed the importance of realizing more social cohesion through culture” and did this by introducing “different art disciplines, accommodations, and (open air) venues, artists, art gatekeepers, as well as cross relations with other policy fields like education and social welfare.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This program also did not just introduce famous Dutch art and literature, it showcased amateur artists and newly emerging identities as well.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Canal houses and Oude Kerk at blue hour with water reflection in Damrak Amsterdam Netherlands.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of Amsterdam, where The Site is located. The photographer of this photo is Basile Morin, 2024. ]]
An example of the plan’s implementation is called The Site, located in Inocaf, Amsterdam.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This is a youth information center that provides information and demonstrations to youths between the ages of 15 and 21 about Dutch culture through different workshops, presentations, and discussions. The Site also partners with the Kunstweb Institute for Art Education in Amsterdam, providing courses such as street dancing and web design to showcase modern expressions of Dutch culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The program is also welcoming to non-Dutch citizens, emphasizing that Dutch culture is meant to be shared with a broader population and embraced by all members of society, not just native citizens.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Site also welcomes discussions of the future, holding a conference that lets youths provide their input on Dutch politics and how it might be improved in the future.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Another example is Fresh Academy, which is a traveling project that visits different schools in Amsterdam, delivering stand-up comedy and different types of acts.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy “follows the framework of the World Culture program of Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the Dutch National Expertise Centre for Arts Education, which executed several pilot projects to stimulate cultural diversity in the field of arts education.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Fresh Academy involves different professional performers that teach Dutch culture through theatre, focusing their teachings on Dutch values, identity, and social skills.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Academy centers on the goal of sharing Dutch identity at a young age and providing young individuals with a sense of community through shared connections and values.
=== Festivals as a Form of Cultural Expression ===
The Netherlands has no shortage of holidays and festivals. The Netherlands celebrates many well-known holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and New Years Eve. However, there are also many holidays and festivals that are unique to the Dutch, some of which began centuries ago. These holidays and festivals foster the nations culture and attract tourists from around the world every year.<ref>Coopmans, M., Jaspers, E., & Lubbers, M. (2016). National day participation among immigrants in the Netherlands: the role of familiarity with commemorating and celebrating. ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies'', ''42''(12), 1925–1940. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2016.1163219 </ref> The first holiday, and one of the oldest, is Sint Maarten or Saint Martin which is celebrated each year on November 11.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitingthedutchcountryside.com/explore-the-netherlands/sint-maarten-holiday-netherlands/|title=The 11th of November Sint Maarten Tradition Explained|last=Manon|date=2023-10-10|website=Visiting The Dutch Countryside|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Saint Martin was a Roman soldier born in the year 316 who became a bishop and a devoted Christian after leaving the Army. It is said that he died on November 8<sup>th</sup> and was buried on November 11<sup>th</sup> in the basilica of Tours and reached heaven.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This day was originally celebrated with a mass and a large feast, but over time it has “evolved into a cheerful celebration of light, generosity, and community.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allaboutexpats.nl/st-martins-day/|title=St. Martin’s Day (Sint Maarten): Celebrating as an Expat|last=Roman|first=Carla|date=2025-11-02|website=All About Expats|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Today it is less associated with religion and has turned more into a festivity for children. It is a day where children go from door to door and sing songs while holding paper lanterns in exchange for sweets such as cookies or chocolates. A parade is also hosted in Utrecht each year to remember St. Martin.
The next festival is Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Santa Clause.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/dutch-christmas-expat-guide-sinterklaas-netherlands|title=The Dutch Christmas? An expat guide to Sinterklaas in the Netherlands|date=2022-12-03|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Sinterklaas is based on Saint Nicholas who is thought to have been a bishop that could perform miracles such as “resurrecting some young schoolchildren and saving sailors from a hurricane.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> Saint Nicholas was canonized following his death and is the patron saint of children.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Sinterklaas is said to wear traditional bishops clothing, a red cape, red hat, and carries a staff. Similar to the United States version of Saint Nicholas, called Santa Claus, he also has a book where he keeps track of the good and naughty children. Also similar to the United States, Sinterklaas leaves gifts and sweets for the children, but instead of leaving them in stockings or under the Christmas tree like in the United States, he leaves them in their shoes. The children receive these presents on Pakjesavond or “present night” which occurs on December 5<sup>th</sup>.
Another holiday is Carnaval, which is celebrates in the southern parts of the Netherlands primarily. This is a three-day celebration that takes place mainly in North Brabant and Limburg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.meininger-hotels.com/blog/en/dutch-carnival/|title=Explore Dutch Carnival 2026|last=Hotels|first=MEININGER|date=2026-01-20|website=MEININGER Hotels|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> The festival features a colorful parade with puppets, floats, costumes, and dancing leading up to Ash Wednesday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/lifestyle-news/carnival-celebrations-netherlands-carnaval-nederland|title=Carnaval 2026: A guide to carnival festival celebrations in the Netherlands|date=2020-02-05|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref>
An important festival, now recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list, is the Rotterdam Summer Carnival. The main goal of this list, which was first established in 2008, is to promote intangible cultural heritages across the world and protect international diversity by bringing awareness to the heritages found on the list. The Rotterdam Summer Carnival, now an internationally recognized event, "unites participants from the Caribbean and European Netherlands, as well as ethnic minority groups from Central and South America and Africa living in the Netherlands."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/rotterdam-summer-carnival-01870|title=Rotterdam Sumer Carnival|website=UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage}}</ref> The event involves a parade and features cultural foods and music.
Another Dutch Festival recognized on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity List is Corso culture.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/corso-culture-flower-and-fruit-parades-in-the-netherlands-01707|title=Corso Culture, Flower and Fruit Parades in the Netherlands|website=UNESCO}}</ref> In the Netherlands, a Corso is a parade that happens annually that features floats decorated with vibrant fruits and flowers. This festival celebrates Corso culture, which originated in southern France and Italy and was spread to the Netherlands in the nineteenth century.
[[File:Amsterdam - Koninginnedag 2009.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of King's Day, with the people who are celebrating wearing orange for the King's birthday. The photographer of this photo is Hadonos, 2009. ]]
One of the most important holidays to the Dutch is Koningsdag or King’s Day, which dates back to 1885 and takes place on April 27<sup>th</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.royal-house.nl/topics/monarchy/king%E2%80%99s-day|title=King’s Day {{!}} Royal House of the Netherlands|last=Affairs|first=Ministry of General|date=2014-12-22|website=www.royal-house.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> This national holiday celebrates King Willem-Alexander’s birthday and is marked with music, dancing, and fairs. It is also customary that everyone wears something orange on King’s Day as the royal family’s name is “House of Orange”.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.holland.com/global/tourism/getting-around/information/the-royal-family/kings-day-in-holland|title=King's Day: a national holiday and the ultimate Dutch party|date=2011-03-09|website=www.holland.com|language=en-EN|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> King’s Day is important to the Dutch as it represents national pride and unity, with the whole of the country celebrating this holiday.
The last major holiday is Liberation Day, which occurs each year on May 5<sup>th</sup>. Liberation day is a nationally observed holiday and marks the day when the Netherlands were liberated from German occupation. The Netherlands were liberated by Canadian, British, American, Polish, Belgian, Czech, and Dutch troops.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/lifestyle/events-festivals-netherlands/liberation-day|title=Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag) in the Netherlands|date=2025-05-20|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-03}}</ref> Every province in the Netherlands has its own Liberation Day festival. Liberation Day is celebrated with parades, open-air festivals, live music, shared meals, and dancing.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Religious Expression ===
In the Netherlands, religious expression and ideological choices are widely respected and protected, allowing people from many different beliefs to practice freely and express their beliefs. <ref>Temperman, J. (2022). Freedom of Religion or Belief and Gender Equality in the Netherlands: Between Pillars, Polders, and Principles. ''The Review of Faith & International Affairs'', ''20''(3), 77–88. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814</nowiki> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15570274.2022.2111814#d1e112 </ref> The Netherlands does not benefit one religion over another as the “freedom of religion and belief is a key part of the Netherlands’ human rights policy.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-religion-and-belief|title=Freedom of religion and belief - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There is a broad range of religious diversity in the Netherlands, with 19.8% of the population belonging to the Catholic Church, 14.4% protestant, and 5.2% Muslim.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://longreads.cbs.nl/the-netherlands-in-numbers-2021/what-are-the-major-religions|title=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|last=CBS|website=What are the major religions? - The Netherlands in numbers 2021 {{!}} CBS|language=nl-NL|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> 55.4% of the population reported to not be religious and the other 5.1% reported 'other'.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
[[File:Westerkerk Amsterdam 20041002.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Westerkerk, a famous protestant church located in Amsterdam that dates back to 1620. The photographer of this photo is Kaihsu Tai, 2004. ]]
Religious freedom is protected at the national level through legislation and by the Constitution. Article 6 of the Constitution protects and guarantees the freedom of religion and belief and Article 1 prohibits discrimination on religious grounds.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 2008|website=Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations}}</ref> An example of this is the Mass Media law that “grants broadcasting time for churches and religious organizations.”<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Van Bijsterveld|first=Sophie|title=Religion and the Secular State in the Netherlands|url=https://original.religlaw.org/content/blurb/files/Netherlands.pdf|journal=Religion and the Secular State|pages=527}}</ref> This law ensures that religious organizations are given a platform through guaranteed broadcasting time to share their beliefs and perspectives publicly.
One landmark religious freedom case was ''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) v. The Netherlands'' (2012). This case was brought before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In this case, conflict arose when the SGP, a conservative Protestant party, argued that according to the Bible, women should not be able to hold public office and should not be able to be on candidate lists, but may still be allowed to be party members. The Dutch Supreme Court in 2010 held that SGP’s rule violated the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and ordered that there be action to end this discrimination, even if it was rooted in religious explanations. <ref>''Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 58369/10 (European Court of Human Rights, July 10, 2012). </ref>The SGP then brought this case before the ECtHR, holding that the decision violated their right to religious freedom under Articles 9 and 11 of the ECHR. However, the Court dismissed the case, holding that the complaint was “manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case exemplified that religious freedoms are protected, but they cannot be used to diminish gender equality.
In another case, ''De Wilde v. Netherlands'', a plaintiff, who was a follower of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, wanted to wear a colander on her head in her driver’s license photos.<ref>''De Wilde v. Netherlands,'' Application No. 9476/19 (European Court of Human Rights, November 9, 2021). </ref> She argued that her religion required it, however, Dutch authorities did not allow her to do so as Pastafarianism was not a recognized or protected religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case eventually reached the ECtHR where the Court sided with Dutch authorities.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Court held that for Article 9 protections to apply, a belief must show enough seriousness and cohesion and found Pastafarianism was more so a form of satire rather than a true religion.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Due to this, wearing a colander was not a protected religious expression and the application was found inadmissible.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Despite how accepting the Netherlands is of other religions and beliefs, this case exemplifies how a religion must actually be recognized and serious to gain protections.
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch culture is often described as a melting pot that is shaped by many different cultures and traditions as diversity is celebrated in the Netherlands. Festivals play a large role in Dutch cultural expression, consisting of many important holidays such as Sint Maarten and internationally recognized festivals such as the Rotterdam Summer Carnival, recently included on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Furthermore, religious expression is strongly protected under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which provide for the freedom of religion and equality. However, legal precedent has shown that religious practice may not be used to undermine gender equality or allow for discrimination against others, and only recognized religions receive protection. In sum, cultural and religious expression are both incredibly important to the Netherlands and are a protected part of Dutch society.
== 6. Privacy and Data Protection ==
=== '''General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)''' ===
The Netherland’s data-protection and privacy are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The GDPR has a broad scope and applies to all forms of personal data, which is defined as “any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> Examples include home addresses, names, surnames, email addresses, IP addresses, a cookie ID, and more.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The GDPR is designed to regulate and protect people’s personal data and privacy. It was put into effect on May 25, 2018 and creates strict obligations for telecommunications providers, digital services, and internet sources. It applies to all businesses and organizations that use and process people’s personal data, directly or indirectly.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://business.gov.nl/regulations/protection-personal-data/|title=Protection of personal data (GDPR)|last=RVO|first=Netherlands Enterprise Agency|website=business.gov.nl|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This includes, “the collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaption or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction, erasure or destruction of personal data.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/data-protection-explained_en|title=Data protection explained - European Commission|website=commission.europa.eu|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> As described above, the GDPR has a broad scope and regulates many different areas of data-protection and privacy in the Netherlands.
=== '''GDPR Implementation and Enforcement''' ===
Due to the GDPR being an EU regulation, unlike a directive, once implemented it became directly applicable to all citizens of the member-states of the EU, including the Netherlands. The GDPR Implementation Act (Uitvoeringswet AVG or Implementation Act), is the national implementation of the GDPR in the Netherlands. Compliance with the GDPR is managed by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA). The DPA is overseen by a Chairman who is appointed for a six-year term, two Commissioners who are appointed for a four-year term, and special members also appointed for four-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref> The DPA is given the authority to impose penalties and fines for GDPR violations.
==== '''<u>DPA Administrative Decisions</u>''' ====
The DPA has actively enforced the GDPR by issuing fines and penalties against numerous organizations. For example in one decision in April 2018, the DPA issued €460,000 fines on the Haga Hospital due to the hospital not adequately protecting their medical records and sensitive patient information.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.osborneclarke.com/insights/the-ap-imposes-its-first-gdpr-fine-on-a-dutch-hospital|title=The AP imposes its first GDPR fine on a Dutch hospital|website=www.osborneclarke.com|language=en|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> There was no two-factor authentication, which the DPA deemed to be a requirement for this type of personal data and thus found the hospital to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref> One of the most notable DPA decisions occurred in April 2022 when the DPA fined the Dutch Tax Authority €3.7 milllion "for the illegal processing of personal data within their fraud signaling facility."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.didomi.io/blog/privacy-law-netherlands|title=What is the privacy law in the Netherlands {{!}} Didomi|website=www.didomi.io|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> The facility had lists of people that the Dutch Tax Authority tracked due to ongoing concerns of fraud, but had no legal basis to hold onto or process such data.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
In another decision occurring in December 2011, an official investigation was launched by the DPA against TomTom N.V., a technology and consumer electronics company that creates digital maps and provides real-time navigation using traffic information. The investigation revealed that TomTom had been giving their geolocation data collected by GPS sensors to commercial third parties. However, the DPA held that the data collected by TomTom could not be “reasonably directly or indirectly reacted to natural persons, either by TomTom or another party” and thus it was not considered personal data that would constitute a breach.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stuff.coffeecode.net/www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/netherlands.php|title=Online Privacy Law: Netherlands|website=Law Library of Congress}}</ref>
More recently, on August 26, 2024, the DPA fined Uber Technologies, Inc. and Uber B.V. for having violated Article 83 of the GDPR which governs intentional or negligent conduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.willkie.com/-/media/files/publications/2024/09/dutch-dpa-fines-uber-290m-for-gdpr-data-transfer-violation.pdf|title=Dutch DPA Fines Uber €290m for GDPR Data
Transfer Violation|last=Alvarez et al|first=Daniel|date=12 September 2024|website=Willkie Farr & Gallagher}}</ref> After investigations by the DPA, they found that for over 2 years, Uber lacked the necessary safeguards “for transferring EEA-based drivers’ personal data to the U.S.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> The DPA found that these violations were systematic and that less harmful alternatives were available to Uber to process data effectively. Uber was fined €290 million for this violation.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Finally, in a decision against TikTok in July 2021, the DPA fined TikTok €750,000 when they found TikTok in breach of children's privacy. This is because when children would install the App, the privacy statement was in English, and not understandable by Dutch youths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2021/07/dutch-privacy-watchdog-fines-tiktok-e750000-after-privacy-probe/|title=Dutch privacy watchdog fines TikTok €750,000 after privacy probe|date=22 July 2021|website=DutchNews}}</ref> The DPA found that by TikTok not providing a Dutch privacy statement that explained how TikTok collects and uses personal data, that it infringed upon the principle of privacy legislation which is "that people must always be given a clear idea of what is being done with their personal data."<ref>''Id.''</ref>
'''<u>Court Cases</u>'''
Similar to the above DPA administrative decisions, privacy and data protections are also overseen and enforced by the Netherland's judicial process.
In the District Court of Amsterdam on September 2, 2019, the Court held that an Employee Insurance Agency, UWV, unlawfully sent information about the illness history data of a person to her new employer.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.turing.law/chronicle-gdpr-case-law-may-2018-may-2020-in-the-netherlands/#_ftnref130|title=Chronicle GDPR case law May 2018 – May 2020 in the Netherlands|last=de Jong|first=Huub|date=23 September 2020|website=Turing Law}}</ref> The Court held this was a breach of the woman’s rights and damages were applied as per the framework set out in the GDPR. The Court awarded €250 finding that although there was a breach, the damages would be lowered as the breach did not interfere with the woman’s employment.
In another case occurring on March 15, 2023, the District Court of Amsterdam held that for “almost 10 years Facebook Ireland unlawfully processed the personal data from its Dutch users.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bureaubrandeis.com/dutch-court-rules-facebook-unlawfully-processed-personal-data/?lang=en|title=Dutch court rules: Facebook unlawfully processed personal data|last=Wildeboer|first=Diana|date=2023-03-17|website=Bureau Brandeis|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-10}}</ref> This information was used for social networking and advertising.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This case was presented to the Court by the Data Privacy Sitchting and Consumentenbond against Facebook Netherlands, Inc. and Facebook Ireland Ltd. Due to the unlawful processing of personal data, the Court found these companies violated the GDPR and fines were subsequently issued.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, data protection and privacy in the Netherlands is governed and overseen by the GDPR; the EU law that assures the safety of personal data. Compliance with the GDPR is enforced by the DPA, which verifies that companies and organizations follow the GDPR by conducting investigations and issuing fines when necessary. The Dutch judicial system also reinforces these data and privacy protections and holds companies responsible in court when violations are found.
== 7. Right to Bodily, Spiritual, and Digital Identity ==
=== '''Personal and Bodily Identity in the Netherlands''' ===
==== <u>Sexuality Protections</u> ====
In the Netherlands, the right to self-determination is supported by both legal and social frameworks that protect citizen’s sexual orientations and identities. By enforcing anti-discrimination laws and fostering a society that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands have become a front runner in promoting the right to one’s personal identity. One of the most prominent anti-discrimination laws was enacted in 1994 by Parliament called the Equal Treatment Act (the Algemene wet gelijke behandeling).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/gender-justice/resource/algemene_wet_gelijke_behandeling_(equal_treatment_act)|title=Algemene wet gelijke behandeling (Equal Treatment Act) {{!}} Legal Information Institute|website=www.law.cornell.edu|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> This Act bans discrimination including discrimination based on “pregnancy, childbirth, or motherhood, and indirect discrimination.”<ref>''Id.''</ref> The Act also bans discrimination in employment settings such as unequal pay and pensions. This Act ensures that individuals have equal rights, regardless of their sexual orientation.
[[File:K3 - Pride Amsterdam 2024.jpg|thumb|This is a picture of the Canal Parade at Pride Amsterdam in 2024.The photographer of this photo is Richard Broekhuijzen, 2024. ]]
Historically, the Netherlands was not always accepting of the LGBTQIA+ community, but beginning in the 1970s, attitudes and policies began shifting significantly. After the repeal of Article 248b in 1971, homosexuality was no longer considered a “mental illness” and homosexual individuals could begin enlisting in the army.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacobs|first=Laura|date=Spring 2017|title=Regulating the Reguliers: How the Normalization
of Gays and Lesbians in Dutch Society Impacts
LGBTQ Nightlife|url=https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3671&context=isp_collection|journal=Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection}}</ref> In 1987, the Netherlands revealed the Homomonument, which is the world’s first public memorial remembering the persecution those in the LGBTQIA+ community endured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
Following this, a series of legislative reforms were enacted aimed at protecting LGBTQIA+ individuals and promoting equality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brokke|first=Daniel|date=24 June 2024|title=Analyzing LGBTQ+ Acceptance in The
Netherlands: Perspectives from inside the
community|url=https://studenttheses.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/20.500.12932/47999/THESIS_DANIEL_BROKKE_MASTER_SOCIOLOGY.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|journal=Utrecht University}}</ref> This legislation consisted of the recognition of same-sex relationships in 1998 and the legalization of same-sex marriage passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-news/pride-month-a-guide-pride-events-lgbtq-rights-netherlands|title=Pride month: A guide to pride events & LGBTQ+ rights in the Netherlands|date=2025-06-01|website=IamExpat in the Netherlands|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> Also in 2001 adoption by same-sex couples was legalized and in 2014, transgender individuals could legally change their gender on official documents such as their licenses without requiring surgery.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Today, the Netherlands has developed a strong culture of acceptance that celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and openly embraces the community.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Just like the United States, pride month is celebrated in June and involves parades and events that promote equality and inclusivity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Collier|first=Kate L.|last2=Horn|first2=Stacey S.|last3=Bos|first3=Henny M. W.|last4=Sandfort|first4=Theo G. M.|date=2015|title=Attitudes toward lesbians and gays among American and Dutch adolescents|url=https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4127384/|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=52|issue=2|pages=140–150|doi=10.1080/00224499.2013.858306|issn=1559-8519|pmc=4127384|pmid=24512056}}</ref> There are also various events that the Netherlands hosts such as Roze Zaterdag and the Amsterdam Canal Parade that promote and celebrate LGBTQIA+ acceptance and culture.<ref>''Id.''</ref> Most recently, Amsterdam has announced that it will be the host of World Pride in 2026, welcoming not just native Dutch individuals, but people from all over the world, further exemplifying the Netherland’s supportive and inclusive culture.
==== '''<u>Gender Self-Determination</u>''' ====
Alongside protections against discrimination and protections for the LGBTQIA+ community, the Netherlands is also very supportive of the right to gender identity, allowing individuals to identify the gender of their choosing. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to pass a law in favor of establishing transgender rights, namely the right to change one's registered gender, in 1985.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/12/19/netherlands-victory-transgender-rights|title=The Netherlands: Victory for Transgender Rights {{!}} Human Rights Watch|date=2013-12-19|language=en|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> However, the law required that transgender individual have to be sterilized and undergo gender-affirming surgery to change their gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Since then, on December 18, 2023, the Dutch Senate approved a law with 51 to 24 votes on transgender rights. The law allows for transgender individuals to officially change their gender markers on official papers and birth certificates to their preferred gender.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The previously outdated requirement for sterilization and gender-affirming surgery were taken away, showing a major step towards bodily autonomy and the right to self-determination. Under this law, anyone who is over the age of 16 can file to have their gender changed.
=== Spiritual Identity ===
Spiritual identity is another strongly protected right in the Netherlands, as the freedom of religion is guaranteed under [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 6] of the Dutch Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref> This Article makes clear that individuals have the right to practice the religion of their choosing and express the beliefs that they follow. [https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf Article 1] also provides protections by prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including religious grounds, and making clear that there must be equal treatment for everyone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/reports/2019/02/28/the-constitution-of-the-kingdom-of-the-netherlands/WEB_119406_Grondwet_Koninkrijk_ENG.pdf|title=Gw. [CONSTITUTION] art 6|website=Government of Netherlands}}</ref>
=== '''Digital Identity and Biometric Data''' ===
==== '''<u>Personal Data Protection</u>''' ====
The Netherlands protects peoples right to control where and how their personal identifying information (name, image, etc.) is being used online.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/personal-data/data-protection|title=Data protection - Personal data - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2017-10-19|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> If any breach of privacy occurs, including identity theft, fraud, or financial loss, the Netherlands requires that both the Data Protection Authority and users are notified of the breach within 72 hours. This ensures that controllers of such data are constantly monitoring any breach risks and that quick action can be taken to comply with the Netherland’s strict data protection laws.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penrose.law/en/personal-data-breaches/|title=Personal Data Breach Legal Support {{!}} Penrose Law|website=https://penrose.law/en/|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
'''<u>Biometric Data Protection</u>'''
The Netherlands enforces GDPR rules, which heavily protect and regulate individuals’ sensitive biometric data. Under Article 9 of the GDPR, biometric data is treated as a separate, special category of data due to how high-risk this data can be. This is because “a breach involving biometric data has irreversible consequences… [i]f data is compromised, it creates a permanent risk of identity theft and fraud for that person.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lawandmore.eu/biometric-data-gdpr-compliance/|title=A Guide To Biometric Data GDPR Compliance In The Netherlands|date=2026-01-05|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref> The GDPR specifically protects the following types of biometric data: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris/retina scan, voice patterns, keystroke dynamics, and gait analysis.<ref>''Id.''</ref> When used for unique identification, the GDPR has automatic protections for these categories of data. Under the GDPR there are two steps to ensure compliance if a company wants to process this type of data.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The two steps include: (1) establishing a lawful basis under Article 6 (such as through consent and necessity) and (2) adhering to the conditions set forth it Article 9.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The conditions in Article 9 allow for the processing of biometric data if any of the following conditions are applicable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/art-9-gdpr/|title=Art. 9 GDPR – Processing of special categories of personal data|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-13}}</ref>
* There is explicit consent from the individual
* Employment or social media requires processing by law
* Vital interests
* Non-profit processing with a political, philosophical, religious, or trade union goal (with appropriate safeguards)
* The individual made the data public
* Court proceedings
* A substantive public interest is involved
* Medical purposes with strict confidentiality
* Public health requirements
* Processing required for archiving purposes in public interest<ref>''Id.''</ref>
Protection of biometric data is enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), which ensures that individuals’ digital identities are being safeguarded and can do this by imposing very heavy fines for noncompliance. The most recent decision occurred in September of 2024. The DPA fined Clearview AI €30.5 million its illegal misuse of facial recognition data.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/documents/decision-fine-clearview-ai|title=Decision fine Clearview AI|date=3 September 2024|website=AP}}</ref> The company was processing this data with no lawful basis and was found to be in violation of the GDPR.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
Overall, the Netherlands has become known to be a strong protector of the bodily, spiritual and digital identities of individuals. The Netherlands supports the right to self-determination and strongly enforces anti-discrimination laws in an effort to ensure that all individuals are treated equally in society. Further, the LGBTQIA+ community in the Netherlands is widely celebrated with an internationally recognized Pride parade every year, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Spiritual identity is also protected in the Netherlands under Articles 1 and 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and prohibit discrimination based on religion. As the world is becoming increasingly online, the Netherlands also has strong protections for one's digital identity. The DPA and the enforcement of the GDPR ensures that individuals can control how their personal information is used online and ensures that biometric data is being handled according to strict standards. In conclusion, the Netherlands has displayed a substantial commitment to protecting an individuals personal identity in many forms and in forming a society that promotes equality and respect for all.
== 8. The Right to Reject Information, the Right to Clothing, and Bodily Expression ==
=== '''The Right to Reject Information''' ===
==== <u>Anti-Spam Legislation</u> ====
In the Netherlands, anti-spam legislation is governed by Article 11.7 of the Dutch Telecommunications Act.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/internet-and-smart-devices/advertising/digital-direct-marketing#:~:text=addressed%20to%20companies-,Rules%20for%20digital%20direct%20marketing,opportunity%20to%20raise%20an%20objection.|title=Digital direct marketing|date=9 April 2025|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens}}</ref> Under the Act, explicit consent by an individual is required for an organization to send any unsolicited digital direct marketing including emails, text messages, and messages through apps.<ref>''Id.''</ref> This legislation works by requiring an opt-in and opt-out approach, where an individual must choose to receive messages and can subsequently unsubscribe from receiving them. The only exception to this rule is that a company does not have to ask for consent if the individual is already an existing customer.<ref>''Id.''</ref>
==== <u>The Right to Erasure</u> ====
Netherlands’ privacy law recognizes the right to erasure, also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’ which refers to an individual’s right to have their personal data erased.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> An individual may request that an organization deletes their personal data by reaching out to that company directly, in which the company has one month to respond.<ref>''Id.''</ref> The right to erasure is codified in Article 17 of the GDPR.<ref>European Union. (2016). ''Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation),'' Art.17''.'' https://gdpr-info.eu/ </ref> Under this Article, and enforced by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, entity’s are required to erase a person’s data and may not process the data any longer in the situations below:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
* An organization does not need the data any longer for the purpose in which it was collected
* A person withdraws consent to the data being used
* A person objects to the use of their data
* An organization does not comply with privacy rules and laws regarding their use of personal data
* An organization is required to by law
* Data was collected on a child under the age of 16<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
Due to the increase in the amount of data that can be collected online, privacy law in the Netherlands takes on a protectionist role, ensuring that individuals can control how and where their data is being used. Organizations must inform individuals on what data is being processed and subsequently adhere to requests to remove that data if consent to use it has been taken away.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/themes/basic-gdpr/privacy-rights-under-the-gdpr/right-to-erasure|title=Right to erasure|website=Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The GDPR also has child specific safeguards to protect their personal information due to children being a higher-risk category of individuals as they may not be aware of the risks of their personal data being used.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> These safeguards include ensuring that children understand the risks and rights of their personal data by requiring that “any information and communication, where processing is addressed to a child, should be in such a clear and plain language that the child can easily understand.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-58/|title=Recital 58 - The Principle of Transparency|website=General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)|language=en-US|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> This way, children can be made aware of the possible dangers of companies processing their personal data and take steps to mitigate and avoid any potential harm.
=== Clothing and Religious Expression ===
[[File:Klompen (Dutch Clogs), Wooden Shoes Museum in Drenthe.jpg|thumb|This picture depicts traditional Dutch wooden shoes, called klompen. This picture is from OXLAEY.com, 2014. ]]
Traditional dutch clothing, such as the wooden shoes, called klompen, characterized by their distinct bright color and shape have existed for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2558|title=The European clog – a centuries-old design|website=www.satra.com|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The right to wear clothing, and to choose which clothing to wear, is protected by the freedom of expression in the Netherlands under Article 7 of the Constitution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/human-rights/human-rights-worldwide/freedom-of-expression-and-internet-freedom|title=Freedom of expression, internet freedom and independent journalism - Human rights - Government.nl|last=Zaken|first=Ministerie van Buitenlandse|date=2018-12-27|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The right to wear religious clothing in the Netherlands is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which protects the freedom of religion.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/constitution.htm|title=The Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. art 6.|website=Dutch Civil Law}}</ref> As per this Article, individuals have the right to express their religion through clothing in their daily lives. While citizens are protected under this right, the right is not absolute and has been limited by recent legislation. In 2019, the Netherlands introduced the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> popularly referred to as the ‘burqa ban’.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The act was intended to prevent individuals from wearing face coverings in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.government.nl/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/topics/ban-on-face-coverings-referred-to-in-the-media-as-the-%E2%80%98burka-ban%E2%80%99/question-and-answer/what-does-the-partial-ban-on-face-coverings-entail|title=What does the partial ban on face coverings entail? - Government.nl|last=Koninkrijksrelaties|first=Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en|date=2019-08-07|website=www.government.nl|language=en-GB|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Face coverings includes “balaclavas, burkas, nikabs, full-face motorcycle helmets and masks.”<ref>''Id.'' (Motorcycle helmets are allowed while driving a motorcycle, but are not allowed to be worn in public places where it is necessary to be identifiable.) </ref> This partial ban on face coverings “prohibits clothing that “covers the face” from being worn in schools, hospitals, and other public buildings and public transport.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.humanrightscentre.org/blog/burqa-ban-new-law-came-effect-netherlands|title=Burqa Ban: new law came into effect in the Netherlands {{!}} Czech Centre for Human Rights and Democracy|date=2019-02-20|website=www.humanrightscentre.org|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
The Act has been largely criticized for being discriminatory against Muslim women who wear a burqa or niqab and a violation of the freedom of religion. Many regard this law as being far too sweeping as it severely impacts Muslim women and restricts their access to public places.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/research-centres/centre-religion-conflict-globalization/blog/exclusion-through-the-law-the-netherlands-burqa-ban-16-09-2019|title=Exclusion through the Law: the Netherlands’ ‘Burqa Ban’|date=2019-09-16|website=University of Groningen|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> Thus, while the Netherlands formally guarantees the freedom of religion, including in clothing, this freedom is subject to criticized limitations.
=== Legal Frameworks Governing Bodily Expression, Obscenity, and Child Exploitation ===
Under the Dutch Criminal Code, the regulation of public nudity and obscenity are codified and are punishable by law. Under Article 430(a) of the Dutch Criminal Code, public nudity is generally prohibited in public places, however, nudity may be permitted in locations where it is customary or socially acceptable, which is decided by the local municipality.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/uploads/res/document/nld/1881/criminal_code_english_2012_html/Criminal_Code_as_amended_2012_ENGLISH.pdf|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 430(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> By contrast, Article 239 of the Criminal Code criminalized obscenity and is concerned with the protection of the public from being exposed to behavior that is found to be sexually explicit or morally offensive. This Article provides an outright ban on obscenity when it violates decency standards and publicly offends others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 239|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref>
The Netherlands’ emphasis on protecting the public from offensive or indecent exposure also extends to a stricter area of law that is structured around safeguarding minors. Laws governing child pornography in the Netherlands prioritizes the protection of children’s dignity, autonomy, and safety, especially given the inherent risks of the internet and how quickly pictures and information can be disseminated online. Child pornography is criminalized under Section 240 of the Dutch Criminal Code. Section 240(a) describes that any person who “supplies, offers or shows” a minor, whom they know or should reasonably know is under the age of 16, “an image, an object or a data carrier” that contains an image that may be harmful to a person of that age can be punished with up to one year in prison or a fine of the fourth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(a)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> Section 240(b) of the criminal code says that a person who “distributes, offers, publicly displays, produces, imports, conveys in transit, exports, obtains, possesses or accesses” an image that displays sexual acts involving a person under the age of eighteen years old will be punished by imprisonment or a fine of the fifth category.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/nld/1881/criminal_code.html?|title=Wetboek van Strafrecht [Dutch Criminal Code], Article 240(b)|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> This subsection also says that a person who makes it either a habit or profession of committing any of the aforementioned offenses will be imprisoned for up to 8 years or given a fine of the fifth category.<ref>''Id.''</ref>These laws clearly establish that child pornography in the Netherlands is illegal in all forms and place a strong emphasis on the prioritization of the protection of minors.
Legislation in this area of law is rapidly expanding as a result of the rise in the use of artificial intelligence ("AI”), which is currently being addressed at the national level in the Netherlands’ court system, as exemplified by the Grok AI case.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> In March of 2026, the Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment, the “first European court ruling to impose a binding injunction on an AI image generator over non-consensual sexualized content.”<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref> The Court held that X and the chatbot X uses, named Grok, must immediately stop the use of Grok in generating sexual images and child pornography in the Netherlands. The Court imposed a fine of €100,000 per day until X complied with the order. The Court supported its holding by finding that the non-consensual sexual images and child pornography violated the GDPR and was unlawful under Dutch law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://techpolicy.press/dutch-court-orders-x-grok-to-stop-aigenerated-sexual-abuse-content|title=Dutch Court Orders X, Grok to Stop AI-Generated Sexual Abuse Content|last=Jahangir|first=Ramsha|date=2026-03-26|website=Tech Policy Press|language=en|access-date=2026-04-14}}</ref>
These issues surrounding the regulation of the internet and growth in the use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) are being addressed not only at the national level in the Netherlands, but also through broader European Union initiatives that the Netherlands will follow. Current legislation in the Netherlands does make it possible to take legal action against those who create, possess, and distribute explicit images, but it does not solve the new problem that AI is creating. However, there is new European legislation that is currently being drafted to ban AI ‘nudify’ apps and websites which will target AI systems that can create nonconsensual sexually explicit images.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/dutch-regulators-dutch-police-and-dutch-public-prosecution-service-welcome-european-ban-ai-nudify-apps-and-websites|title=Dutch regulators, the Dutch Police, and the Dutch Public Prosecution Service welcome a European ban on ‘AI nudify apps and websites’|website=Authority for Consumers & Markets}}</ref> This ban is being firmly supported by the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, the Dutch Police, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, and other Dutch Regulators.<ref>''Id.''</ref> While waiting for the enactment of the ban, the Dutch Police and Dutch Public Prosecution Service “will continue to handle individual reports, and assess how they can get the most out of the existing legislative framework.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
=== Conclusion ===
In conclusion, Dutch law demonstrates a strong commitment and effort to balancing one's personal freedoms with privacy rights and the necessity to protect the public from harm. The Netherlands protects personal liberties such as the right to refuse information, the right to choose one's clothing, and the right to protect one's personal data and privacy. This has been displayed through the Netherlands' anti-spam legislation that requires explicit consent from individuals before a company may send unsolicited digital marketing communications as well as Dutch privacy law which reinforces the 'right to erasure'. Further, the right to clothing and expression is generally protected under Article 6 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of religion and expression. However, this freedom has been proven to be not absolute, as illustrated by the Partial Ban on Face-Covering Clothing Act. Lastly, the Dutch Criminal Code regulates public nudity and obscenity to ensure public safety, with these protections becoming especially strict when minors are involved. Child pornography in all forms is heavily criminalized in the Netherlands, especially given the newfound concerns involving AI-generated images. As a whole, these laws emphasize how the Dutch legal system places strong protections on an individuals' personal autonomy and right to reject unwanted information, while also ensuring public safety and the protection of vulnerable individuals as technology continued to develop.
== References ==
[[Category:Netherlands]]
[[Category:Law in Europe]]
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= Communications Law in the Kingdom of Morocco =
[[File:Flag of Morocco.svg|thumb|The emblem of Morocco, adopted in 1915. The star's points represent the five pillars of Islam ]]
== Sources of Communications Law in Morocco ==
Morocco's strategic geographical location and historical legacy make for a unique legal landscape, especially as it pertains to communications law. For centuries, Morocco was itself a communication corridor between continents, ancient tribal societies, empires, religions and colonial powers.<ref name=":11">{{Cite web|url=https://www.kas.de/documents/265308/265357/Legal%2BSystem%2Bof%2BMorocco.pdf/23060d5a-26e0-64a0-7b8f-8b3640d68865|title=The Legal System of Morocco|last=Hanafi|first=Leila|date=August 2020}}</ref> This baggage is palpable in the modern Morocco, despite its vast advances towards a more democratic and egalitarian legal order over the past two decades.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.stimson.org/2025/moroccos-two-speed-reality/|title=Morocco’s Two-Speed Reality|last=El Yaaqoubi|first=Safae|date=December 10, 2025|website=Stimson}}</ref> Morocco is a parliamentary constitutional monarchy but is distinguished from other such forms of government, like Spain or the Netherlands, in that the monarch retains substantial political power alongside an elected Prime Minister and his Cabinet of Ministers<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.wrmea.org/north-africa/does-the-moroccan-monarchy-function-as-an-institution.html|title=Does the Moroccan Monarchy Function as an Institution?|last=Kouar|first=Abderrazak|date=November 17, 2025|website=Washington Report on Middle East Affairs}}</ref> – a recipe for gridlock, an ingenious way to preserve ancestral tradition, or perhaps a bit of both. The rule of law in Morocco, and unavoidably communications law, balance between longstanding practice and a wave of reform and modernization.<ref>''Id''.</ref> This balancing game is not without its pitfalls and exists within a venn diagram aligning constitutional law, national statutory law, regional and international law. Together, these sources of law seek to enforce Morocco's civil liberties and political rights and champion participation, pluralism and good governance,<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Morocco_2011.pdf?lang=en|title=Morocco's Constitution of 2011|date=2012|website=Constitute Project}}</ref> but without ever compromising the deeply rooted principles of the monarchy, Islam, and territorial integrity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.brookings.edu/articles/morocco-the-kings-dilemma/|title=Morocco: The king’s dilemma|last=Abdel Ghafar|first=Adel|date=March 2, 2017|website=Brookings}}</ref>
=== National & Regulatory Framework ===
==== Constitutional Guarantees ====
The backbone of the communications law regime in Morocco is built upon the 2011 Constitution. Its text came to replace its outdated 1967 predecessor and lays out the country's governmental makeup which, much like the United States, is established upon three branches: The executive, the legislative, and the judicial.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/what-type-of-government-does-morocco-have.html|title=What Type Of Government Does Morocco Have?|last=Politics|first=Amber Pariona in|date=2017-08-01|website=WorldAtlas|language=en-US|access-date=2026-03-03}}</ref> While the respective authority of these factions of government used to be primarily informal and functionally intertwined, the Constitution institutionalized and delineated the scope of their power.<ref>''Id''.</ref> Even the extent of the King's functions are defined within the regulations of the Constitution, though his authority in effect protrudes from the confines of the text and is an accepted norm within the very fabric of Moroccan society.<ref name=":0" />
The Moroccan government is the structural safe keeper of the rights and freedoms outlined in the Constitution. Article 25 through Article 29 recognize and guarantee the following:<ref name=":1" />
* Freedom of opinion, thought, and conscience
* Freedom of expression
* Freedom of the press
* Right to academic freedom
* Right to culture
* Right to information
* Freedom of association
* Freedom of assembly
* Right to strike
These rights and freedoms are limited however, and can be derogated in certain circumstances, especially if and when the legitimacy of the monarch, the official religion, or the country's borders is at issue. The preamble of the Constitution indeed sets out, before ever treating communication rights, that Morocco is "a sovereign Muslim State, attached to its national unity and to its territorial integrity;"<ref name=":1" /> while the nation's motto and closing line of the national anthem is "God, the Homeland, the King."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lingualid.com/the-national-anthem-of-morocco/|title=The National Anthem of Morocco|last=Cheddadi|first=Oualid}}</ref> This triad is untouchable across all sources of law in Morocco and communication around it is heavily monitored and disincentivized. [[File:King Hassan II with Mohammed VI.jpg|thumb|Late Kind Hasan II accompanied by current Monarch, Mohammed VI]]
The guarantees of the Moroccan Constitution are well anchored within the country's governance structure but far from absolute. Contrary to that of the United States, the Moroccan Constitution is not self-executing and points to legislation and regulatory bodies for the implementation of its clauses.<ref name=":1" /> Statutory limits and regulatory authorities thus define and frame the practical scope of communication and media freedoms.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|url=https://ebrary.net/263822/education/legal_framework_regulations_media_landscape_morocco|title=Legal framework and regulations of the media landscape in Morocco|website=Ebrary|publisher=Routledge Handbook on Arab Media}}</ref> Article 71 of the Moroccan Constitution relegates as a domain of the law "the regime of the broadcast media and of the press in all their forms."<ref name=":1" /> Despite considerable reform and leaps in civil liberties, Morocco continues to sit at a 37/100 Global Freedom Score - primarily citing the King's informal influence across sectors for this assessment, in addition to the substantiality of his constitutionally granted power.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://freedomhouse.org/country/morocco/freedom-world/2025|title=Freedom in the World 2025: Morocco|website=Freedom House}}</ref>
==== Press & Publishing Regulation ====
Though Article 28 of the Constitution guarantees freedom of the press, it nonetheless provides that "the law establishes the rules of organization and of control of the means of public communication."<ref name=":1" /> The law in question is the Press Code of 2016 which has seen many a version and amendment since the end of the French occupation in the 1950s.<ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=https://ebrary.net/289627/education/press_code|title=The Press Code|last=Bouziane|first=Zaid}}</ref> Previous iterations of the Code between 1959 and 2002 imposed heavy prison sanctions for non-violent speech offenses criticizing the royal family, Islam, the country's border integrity, as well as defamation and the publication of fake news.<ref name=":4">{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/report/2017/05/05/red-lines-stay-red/moroccos-reforms-its-speech-laws|title=The Red Lines Stay Red: Morocco's Reforms of its Speech Laws|last=Goldstein|first=Eric|date=May 4, 2017|website=Human Rights Watch}}</ref> Indeed, the 1959 Press Code enforced prison sentences of up to 20 years while the 2002 edition of the Code reduced the jail penalty to a maximum of 5 years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://rsf.org/en/new-press-code-retains-prison-sentences-press-offences?utm_source=chatgpt.com|title=The new press code retains prison sentences for press offences|date=February 22, 2002|website=Reporters Without Borders}}</ref>
The 2016 Press Code, passed through Law 88.13, eliminated civil speech-related prison sentencing for journalists and created a self-regulatory body staffed with elected members, the National Press Council.<ref name=":3" /> The Council enjoys considerable freedom from the government to independently oversee journalistic ethics and uphold professional standards amongst the press and media.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cnp.press.ma/fr/home-fr/|title=Conseil National de la Presse}}</ref> That being said, the three taboo themes of the monarchical regime, religion, and the Saharan borders remain present in the most recent Press Code and give rise to steep fines of up to $50,000 as well as jail time for failure to satisfy said fines.<ref>''Id''.</ref> The average monthly income in Morocco being of about $2,000 per month, incurring such a fine will more likely than not lead to incarceration.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://worldsalaries.com/average-salary-in-morocco/|title=Average Salary in Morocco|date=2026|website=World Salaries}}</ref>
The press used to be particularly vocal in criticizing the authoritarian reign of late King Hasan II, and the government's caution towards the press sector never fully subsided even under a relatively more moderate monarchy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.islamicity.org/270/hassan-ii-a-king-beloved-or-despised/|title=Hassan II: A King Beloved or Despised?|last=Wright|first=Zakariya|date=July 26, 1999|website=Islamicity}}</ref> In fact, the Parliament is currently entertaining a bill to retract some of the freedom granted to the National Press Council and restore governmental oversight over the publishing process.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2026/01/276161/constitutional-court-finds-major-flaws-in-moroccos-press-council-reorganization-law/|title=Constitutional Court Finds Major Flaws in Morocco’s Press Council Reorganization Law|last=Zouiten|first=Sara|date=January 23, 2026}}</ref>
==== Broadcasting & Audiovisual Regulation ====
Broadcasting in Morocco is no free market activity and was controlled by state monopoly until 2005.<ref name=":5" /> Broadcasting law 77-03 shifted ownership rights over television and radio broadcasting to private operators, though the majority of TV channels remain state affiliated today.<ref name=":12">{{Cite web|url=https://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/legislation/details/7367|title=Law No. 77-03 on Audiovisual Communication (promulgated by Dahir No. 1-04-257 of 25 Kaada 1425 (January 7, 2005)), Morocco|date=January 7, 2005|website=WIPO}}</ref>
Article 28 of the Constitution expressly relegates the regulatory oversight of the broadcasting domain to the High Authority of Broadcasting (HACA).<ref name=":1" /> HACA was founded in 2002 and is a fully impartial institution, though under the tutelary power of the King.<ref name=":2" /> Article 165 of the Constitution further defines the role of HACA as seeing to "the respect for pluralist expression of the currents of opinion and of thought and of the right of information," but that "within the respect for the fundamental values of civilization and for the laws of the Kingdom."<ref name=":1" /> HACA thus issues and controls licensing for broadcasting purposes, monitors broadcasted content, and imposes suspensions or fines, especially where the three sensitive topics of the monarchy, the national religion, or territorial integrity are infringed upon.
==== Postal Services & Telecommunication ====
Much like the constitutional framework surrounding broadcasting, the telecom sector is fully delegated to legislative supervisory authority. Article 71 provides that "the regime of the technologies of information and of communication . . . are of the domain of the law."<ref name=":1" /> The Post and Telecommunications law of 1997, number 24-96, established the National Telecom Regulator Agency (ANRT).<ref name=":5">{{Cite web|url=https://www.maroc.mom-gmr.org/en/context/law/|title=Media Ownership Monitor Morocco|date=2017|website=Le Desk}}</ref>
The objectives of the ANRT mirror Morocco's general legal approach to communications: On one hand the body is responsible for liberalizing and modernizing telecom infrastructure and encouraging access to and competition around its markets, while limiting licensing and frequency allocation upon national security and legal compliance concerns.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ptt.ma/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/loi-24-96-telecoms-consolide%CC%81e-version-23-avril-2019.pdf|title=Loi n24-96 consolidée relative à la poste et aux télécommunications, telle qu’elle a été modifiée et Complétée|date=April 29, 2019|website=ptt.ma}}</ref> The ANRT does not extend fines and sanctions like other regulatory bodies but may employ means like surveillance and interception of prohibited requests and online content.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/location/middle-east-and-north-africa/morocco-and-western-sahara/morocco-and-western-sahara/|title=Morocco and Western Sahara|website=Amnesty International}}</ref>
[[File:Rabat Cnstitutional Court.jpg|thumb|The Supreme Court in Rabat, Morocco]]
==== The Criminal Law Loophole ====
Where the Press Code, HACA, and the ANRT leave no administrative avenues for the state to restrict non-violent speech around the three-pillared threat, the Penal code acts as a last resort. Indeed, where speech offends the person of the King, Islam, or Morocco's territorial integrity, the Penal Code allows for criminal prosecution and the distribution of prison sentences, heavy fines or both.<ref name=":4" />
Regardless of the method or platform of speech, the Moroccan government interprets any attack upon the said trio a firm red line and a threat to national security. Article 267 makes the latter explicit by prescribing a 6 month prison sentence along with up to a $20,000 fine for anyone who "compromises the Islamic religion, the monarchical regime, or who incites the compromising of the territorial integrity of the Kingdom."<ref name=":13">{{Cite web|url=https://cyrilla.org/en/entity/43p0bxmmerr4er7hrxfsvmquxr/text-search?searchTerm=islam&file=1729515614696hv6ynsawau7.pdf&page=104|title=Code Penal|date=July 5, 2018|publisher=Ministère de la Justice et des Libertés|language=French}}</ref> Recently, two individuals were sentenced to five years in prison under Articles 263 to 267 of the Penal Code for making posts on Facebook criticizing the government's normalization and continued relationship with Israel.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://freedomhouse.org/country/morocco/freedom-net/2024|title=Freedom of the Net 2024: Morocco|website=Freedom House}}</ref> This effectively creates a layered restriction system where the lack of cause of action under administrative and civil channels is supported by a strict and frozen in time Penal Code.
=== Regional Legal Framework ===
==== Africa ====
Morocco commits itself in the preamble of its Constitution to "reinforce South-South cooperation" and to "consolidate relations of cooperation and of solidarity with the peoples of the countries of Africa."<ref name=":1" /> One of the ways by which it fulfills this commitment is through its membership in the African Union. Since 2002, the Union as a continental intergovernmental organization, has joined 55 member states on the continent around principles of "freedom, equality, justice and dignity" in the context of African brotherhood and solidarity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://au.int/en/overview|title=About the African Union|website=African Union}}</ref> Even at a regional level, Morocco has remained loyal to its national priorities. So much so, that the Kingdom left the African Union's Predecessor organization – the Organization of African Unity (OAU) – in 1984 after the territorial status of the Western Sahara was put in question and a majority of the OAU members voted to recognize the territory as independent.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/1/31/morocco-rejoins-the-african-union-after-33-years|title=Morocco rejoins the African Union after 33 years|last=Mohamed|first=Hamza|date=January 31, 2017|website=Aljazeera}}</ref> Since, Morocco has rejoined the African Union in 2017 with the mission of resolving the Sahara dispute in its favor, and somewhat successfully so since no members of the Union believe that "total independence for Western Sahara is still on the cards."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.newsweek.com/morocco-african-union-western-sahara-551783|title=Why Has Morocco Rejoined the African Union After 33 Years?|last=Gaffey|first=Conor|date=February 2, 2017|website=Newsweek}}</ref>
Morocco's rigidity towards its Western Sahara stance has also translated in the Kingdom's continued refusal to ratify the African Charter on Human and People's Rights to this day.<ref name=":6">{{Cite web|url=https://www.cfjustice.org/wp-content/uploads/filr/48443/CFJ%20-%20Morocco-%20ACHPR%20Country%20Review%20Report.pdf|title=MOROCCO: ACHPR COUNTRY BRIEFING REPORT: HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS AND VIOLATIONS OF THE AFRICAN CHARTER (OCTOBER 2024 – APRIL 2025)|website=Cfjustice|publisher=Committee for Justice}}</ref> The African Commission on Human and People's Rights (ACHPR), a product of the Banjul Charter, therefore does not have jurisdiction over Morocco and its human rights policies and practices. The Charter's Article 9 guarantees to every individual "the right to express and disseminate his opinions within the law."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/AFRICAN-BANJUL-CHARTER-ON-HUMAN-AND-PEOPLES-RIGHTS.pdf|title=AFRICAN (BANJUL) CHARTER ON HUMAN AND PEOPLES' RIGHTS|website=African-Court}}</ref> This language is entirely in line with the Moroccan Constitution and its human rights standards, but the Kingdom continues to decline formal adoption of the Charter due to fundamental political differences. The ACHPR nonetheless issues country review reports of Morocco as a member of the African Union and has most recently contended the following: "The independence of the judiciary, although affirmed in constitutional and legal provisions, continues to be undermined by structural weaknesses and interference from the executive, especially in cases implicating national security or dissenting political expression."<ref name=":6" /> The African Court on Human and People's Rights was founded by virtue of Article 1 of the Protocol to the Banjul Charter.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.african-court.org/afchpr/welcome-to-the-african-court-2/#|title=Welcome to the African Court|website=African Court on Human and People's Rights}}</ref> Like the Banjul Charter itself, Morocco has not ratified its Protocol and is therefore not subject to the jurisdiction of the Court.<ref>''Id''.</ref>
==== Other Regional Mechanisms ====
[[File:Morocco physical map (de facto).png|thumb|400x400px|Map of Morocco, displaying the complexity of the Sahara territorial dispute ]]
As a Muslim and Arabic speaking nation, Morocco has been a continuous member of the Arab League of Nations since 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.leagueofarabstates.net/en/aboutlas/Pages/CountryDataDetails.aspx?RID=18|title=Member States: Kingdom of Morocco|website=League of Arab States}}</ref> Beyond strengthening relations amongst Arab States, the League's mission centers around respect for national independence and sovereignty.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.refworld.org/legal/constinstr/las/1945/en/13854|title=Charter of Arab League|date=March 22, 1945|website=refworld}}</ref> The Kingdom's membership in the organization is consistent with the preamble of the Moroccan Constitution which seeks to "deepen the bonds of togetherness with the Arab and Islamist Ummah, and to reinforce the bonds of fraternity and of solidarity with its brother peoples"<ref name=":1" /> (Fellow Muslims frequently refer to each other as brothers.) The League was established upon a minimal Charter, ratified by Morocco, which aims to facilitate communication, economic and cultural exchange amongst member States.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.leagueofarabstates.net/en/aboutlas/Documents/The%20Charter%20of%20the%20League%20of%20Arab%20States.pdf|title=The Charter of the League of Arab States|date=March 22, 1945|website=League of Arab States}}</ref> In 2008, the Arab Charter on Human Rights which placed greater emphasis on individual rights and liberties, came into force but was not ratified by Morocco and many other members of the Arab League.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://carnegieendowment.org/sada/2009/10/the-arab-charter-on-human-rights|title=The Arab Charter on Human Rights|last=Rishmawi|first=Mervat|date=October 6, 2009|website=Carnegie Endowment}}</ref> Moroccan law is thus not constrained by the Arab Charter on Human Rights. An Arab Court of Human Rights has been a longstanding project of the Arab League which has yet to materialize.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40802-021-00202-w|title=The Failure of the Arab Court of Human Rights and the Conflicting Logics of Legitimacy, Sovereignty, Orientalism and Cultural Relativism|last=Almutawa|first=Ahmed|date=January 12, 2022|website=Springer Nature}}</ref> This makes the enforcement of the Human Rights Charter particularly challenging even for its ratifying states.
Morocco has expressed interest in joining the European Union on the basis of mutually beneficial trade and migration advantages.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eeas.europa.eu/morocco/european-union-and-morocco_en?s=204|title=The European Union and Morocco|date=January 28, 2026|website=eeas.europa.eu}}</ref> This interest never culminated in a formal application and has proved quite unpopular amongst existing EU member states. <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ispionline.it/en/publication/morocco-eu-relations-navigating-sovereignty-concerns-and-growing-interdependence-181487|title=Morocco-EU Relations: Navigating Sovereignty Concerns and Growing Interdependence|date=July 23, 2024|website=Italian Institute for International Political Studies}}</ref> Morocco is therefore not bound by any European regional frameworks as of the time being. The European Union has in an unexpected turn of events adopted a complete territorial map of Morocco from Tangier to La Guera, including the Sahara, as part of the EU's most recent annual investment report.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://barlamantoday.com/2026/03/04/eu-policy-shift-recognizes-moroccos-sovereignty-over-sahara/|title=EU Policy Shift Recognizes Morocco’s Sovereignty Over Sahara|last=Elghoubachi|first=Amina|date=March 4, 2026|website=Barlaman Today}}</ref> As an important source of tension between the two regions comes to a resolution, this could point to a concretization of EU-Moroccan relations and perhaps the increased adoption of European standards within Moroccan communications law in the long run.
=== International Legal Framework ===
Like its regional human rights commitments, the preamble of Morocco's Constitution also recognizes its membership within international organizations and its subscription "to the principles, rights and obligations enounced in their respective charters and conventions; [and] affirms its attachment to the Rights of Man such as they are universally recognized, as well as its will to continue to work to preserve peace and security in the world."<ref name=":1" />
Most notably, Morocco is a signatory without reservations of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR),<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/_layouts/15/TreatyBodyExternal/Treaty.aspx?Treaty=CCPR|title=Ratification Status for CCPR - International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights|website=United Nations Human Rights Treaty Bodies}}</ref> as well as the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/_layouts/15/TreatyBodyExternal/Treaty.aspx?Treaty=CESCR|title=Ratification Status for CESCR - International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights|website=United Nations Human Rights Treaty Bodies}}</ref> Articles of the ICCPR highlight freedom of thought, freedom of expression, freedom of opinion, the right of peaceful assembly, and the freedom to seek, receive and impart information.<ref name=":7">{{Cite web|url=https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/international-covenant-civil-and-political-rights|title=International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights|date=December 16, 1966|website=Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights}}</ref> The ICESCR recognizes the right to enjoy culture life and to the conservation, development and diffusion of culture, as well as the right to enjoy and partake in scientific, literary and artistic production.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/international-covenant-economic-social-and-cultural-rights|title=International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights|date=December 16, 1966|website=Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights}}</ref> These rights and freedoms are almost unanimously found in the Moroccan Constitution as discussed above. However, the Moroccan framework adds a layer of constraint when compared to these international treaties and limits the exercise of the said rights to the caveat of the law.
Having ratified the ICCPR, Morocco is subject to the periodic review of the Human Rights Committee and its resulting recommendations per Article 28 of the ICCPR.<ref name=":7" /> The Committee's sixth periodic report of Morocco noted the following: "The Committee welcomes the adoption of the new Press Code in 2016, under which press-related offences are no longer subject to custodial penalties. It is concerned, however, about the concurrent introduction of new provisions in the Criminal Code that establish terms of imprisonment as penalties for acts perceived as being offensive to Islam or the monarchy or as posing a threat to the country’s territorial integrity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://docs.un.org/en/CCPR/C/MAR/CO/6|title=Concluding observations on the sixth periodic report of Morocco|date=December 16, 2016|website=United Nations}}</ref>" The Committee further recommended the immediate revision of the Penal Code to ensure alignment with Article 19 of the ICCPR.<ref>''Id''.</ref> This has yet to be done since the report was issued in 2016 and unlikely to see fruition, especially as it pertains to the three themes highlighted by the Committee.
== Principles of Communication Law & the Media ==
Morocco presents a revealing illustration of the tensions which can arise between the many moving parts of communications law. Through its contemporary media framework, its recent constitutional and statutory reforms, and its membership in regional and international human rights organizations, the Kingdom is pursuing its constitutional mission of "consolidation and . . . reinforcement of the institutions of the modern State [based on] the principles of participation, of pluralism and of good governance," championing "security, liberty, equality of opportunities, [and] respect for . . . dignity and social justice."<ref name=":1" /> Against this backdrop however, informal structures and practices stand guard to the nature of messages a sender may successfully transmit to the public. Article 27 of the Constitution guarantees Moroccans the right to access information relevant to the public good, but qualifies this principle by enclosing it within the law and "the objective of assuring the protection of all which concerns national defense, the internal and external security of the State, and the private life of persons."<ref name=":1" /> The recipient has a protected right to receive unfiltered messages so long as the government does not deem the sender to threaten national security by promoting blasphemy, a potential coup against the regime, or the narrative of the Polisario Front – the official representative of the Sahrawi people, demanding the Western Sahara's independence from the Moroccan mainland. Moroccan society is thus to be informed, but within defined limits. The media in Morocco, and more specifically television channels, provide an illuminating case study of this communications model.
[[File:2M TV logo.svg|thumb|The most watched Moroccan TV channel, a state owned broadcaster ]]
=== TV Channels & State Control ===
The media, in its different forms, is by a landslide the Moroccan public's main source of information. The average Moroccan devotes close to 6 hours per day to media consumption, of which about half is spent watching television.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2025/04/190545/moroccans-clock-nearly-6-hours-daily-on-media-consumption/|title=Moroccans Clock Nearly 6 Hours Daily on Media Consumption|last=Faouzi|first=Adil|date=April 16, 2025|website=Morocco World News}}</ref> Moroccans did not follow in the international phenomenon of streaming services and continue to favor national TV channels for news and entertainment, with 72% of viewers watching at least one Moroccan channel everyday.<ref>''Id''. </ref> These numbers would be an endearing show of national unity were it not for the state's significant involvement in the channels' management and the material they broadcast.
Though the 2004 Audiovisual Communication Law put a formal end to state monopoly over TV broadcasting as discussed above, this act was more symbolic than truly reformative in practice and the Moroccan TV sector remains directly or indirectly state-owned today.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://maroc.mom-gmr.org/en/media/tv/|title=Media Ownership Monitor: Television|date=2017|website=Le Desk}}</ref> Indeed, all nine domestic free-to-air Moroccan channels are majoritarily controlled by the Société Nationale de Radiodiffusion et de Télévision (SNRT) (2M, Al Aoula, Laayoune TV, Arryadia, Athaqafia, Al Maghribia, Assadissa, Aflam TV, Medi 1 TV).<ref name=":8">{{Cite web|url=https://www.mom-gmr.org/en/countries/morocco/|title=Media Ownership Monitor: Morocco|website=Global Media Registry}}</ref> As of 2025, SNRT acquired all stakes in 2M and Medi 1 TV and became their sole owner which is particular cause for concern when noting that 2M is the most watched channel in the country.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2025/01/166177/snrt-to-acquire-full-control-of-2m-medi1-tv-and-radio-within-two-months/|title=SNRT to Acquire Full Control of 2M, Medi1 TV and Radio Within Two Months|last=Faouzi|first=Adil|date=January 7, 2025|website=Morocco World News}}</ref> SNRT is wholly owned by the Moroccan government and falls under the Ministry of Youth, Culture and Communication as law 77-03 designed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://statemediamonitor.com/2025/07/societe-nationale-de-radiodiffusion-et-de-television-snrt/|title=Société nationale de radiodiffusion et de télévision (SNRT)|date=July 19, 2025|website=State Media Monitor}}</ref> SNRT's operating budget in 2019 was of approximately $181 million, two thirds of which was directly state subsidized.<ref>''Id''. </ref>
This state presence translates directly to editorial policy and decision-making, and SNRT is widely regarded to be "a mouthpiece of the government, avoiding criticism of state authorities or controversial political actors."<ref>''Id''. </ref> As recently as 2025, HACA received several complaints that the government unfairly used advertising segments on 2M to the advantage ruling majority by diffusing promotional material ahead of the 2026 parliamentary elections.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://en.hespress.com/106539-opposition-parties-file-complaints-against-government-promotional-video-on-public-tv.html?|title=Opposition parties file complaints against Government promotional video on public TV|date=March 25, 2025|website=Hespress English}}</ref> Opposition party members criticized the advertisement as exploitative of national symbols for "covert electoral propaganda."<ref>''Id''.</ref> While HACA as an independent regulatory body should have followed through on these allegations, no investigation or findings were made public to this day.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://en.yabiladi.com/articles/details/166569/2m-s-world-segment-political-advertising|title=2M’s World Cup segment not political advertising, says Morocco’s audiovisual authority|last=Zine|first=Ghita|date=May 5, 2025|website=Yabiladi}}</ref> Not only was the public exposed to potentially dishonest, prohibited content but no real regulation of the message itself or the intent of the sender subsequently took place despite grounded objections.
Both audience concentration across very few channels as well as media ownership concentration by the state in Morocco present a threat to the constitutionally protected rights of access to information and pluralism of ideas. The royal family and government ministers are ostensibly in position to control the media narrative to preserve the national status quo without consequence from established law and regulatory bodies.<ref name=":8" /> The proper legal framework to combat this exists but the gap between text and practice dilutes the message before it ever reaches the recipient. The informal structures and culture of self-censorship which exist within this gap, represent "a disturbing tendency for a cartel with common interests to form at the intersection of the political and business worlds, a cartel that is undermining pluralism and therefore media independence.”<ref>''Id.''</ref>
== Censorship & Violent Content ==
In the age of 9/11 and the Arab Spring lighting through the Middle East and North Africa like wildfire, Morocco found itself in the eye of the storm and responded as such. Whether this response was proportionate to the perceived threat, and whether the state leveraged this new era of legislation to its advantage is to be explored below. Moroccan communications law, like that of many other states facing a non-state actor threat, grapples with the fine line of adequately informing the public – as is constitutionally required –without amplifying terrorist propaganda or further compromising national security. Article 23 of the Moroccan Constitution sets out that "all incitement to racism, to hatred and to violence is prohibited,"<ref name=":1" /> which, unlike other constitutional rights and freedoms, is a standalone clause and not subsequently qualified by its consistency with the law. It is to be noted that this sort of strict prohibition is a rare occurrence within the Constitution and highlights the intolerance of the Moroccan state towards racial discrimination, hatred and acts of violence. Sitting on the other balancing scale is Article 28 of the Constitution which stipulates that "the freedom of the press is guaranteed and may not be limited by any form of prior censure . . . within the sole limits expressly provided by the law, information, ideas and opinions."<ref name=":1" /> The constitutional prohibition on hatred and violence seems absolute at least textually, whereas the press may be subject to censorship where the law intervenes to diffuse national and public unrest. Hatred and violence are broad terms which can be construed under a myriad of interpretations and open to manipulation if left undefined as is the case in the Moroccan Constitution. The Press Code of 2016 does not much more narrowly conceptualize these terms but it does provide some guidance as to their scope in practice. Article 37 of the Code expressly permits journalistic censorship in cases of:
* Direct incitation to homicide, terrorism, theft, or destruction;
* Justification of war crimes, crimes against humanity, crimes of genocide or crimes of terrorism;
* Direct incitation to hatred, racial discrimination or incitation to harm minors.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/legislation/details/16975|title=Law No. 88-13 on the Press and Publishing (promulgated by Dahir No. 1-16-122 of 6 Kaada 1437|date=August 10, 2016|website=Wipolex}}</ref>
=== Anti-Terrorism ===
[[File:Marrakech Bombing Site Late in the Day.jpg|thumb|380x380px|Scene of the aftermath of the Marrakech bombing in tourist hotspot]]
Terrorist attacks in two of Morocco's most densely populated cities – Casablanca and Marrakech – marked the country and shaped the advent of stringent counter-terrorism legislation. A restaurant, social club, and foreign consulate were targeted by suicide bombers in Casablanca in 2003, causing dozens of deaths and hundreds of injured.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/africa/05/16/morocco.blasts/|title=Bombs kill at least 20 in downtown Casablanca|date=May 19, 2003|website=CNN}}</ref> Less than a decade later in 2011, the Argana Café in Marrakech's famous Jamaa El Fnaa square was bombed, costing the life of at least 16 people and shaking the nation to its core.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/africa/30morocco.html|title=Bombs kill at least 20 in downtown Casablanca|last=Mekhennet|first=Souad|date=April 29, 2011|website=New York Times}}</ref>
Anti-terrorism legislation passed less than 10 days after the Casablanca attacks, while the Marrakech bombing coincides with the year that the Moroccan Constitution was amended.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2011/04/29/morocco-marrakesh-bombing-abhorrent|title=Morocco: Marrakesh Bombing Abhorrent|date=April 29, 2011|website=Human Rights Watch}}</ref> Article 218 of the Penal Code, passed through Law 03.03, runs through 6 pages dedicated to a comprehensive anti-terrorism framework.<ref name=":14">{{Cite web|url=https://www.unodc.org/cld/document/mar/1962/code_penal_version_consolidee_du_2014.html?|title=Code Penal|date=March 20, 2014|website=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime}}</ref> The Code prescribes prison terms of up to 10 years, paired with fines of up to $500.000 for anyone found guilty of committing or inciting to commit acts of terrorism through offline or online speech.<ref>''Id''.</ref> On account of this law, Morocco cracked down on more than 2,000 terrorist operations since 2003, including physical and virtual threats.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visionofhumanity.org/moroccos-counterterrorism-evolution/|title=Morocco’s Counterterrorism Evolution|last=May 30, 2022|website=Vision of Humanity}}</ref> The broad terms of the counterterrorism law however, begs the question of whether any wrongful arrests are executed under its authority.
==== Representative Cases ====
Journalists and media outlets have a responsibility to effectively inform the public of potential terrorism risk while simultaneously avoiding to assist terrorists in their divisive political agenda.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/terrorism-and-media-handbook-journalists|title=Terrorism and the Media: A Handbook for Journalists|date=March 27, 2017|website=UNESCO}}</ref> This subtle distinction between reporting on terrorist activity and disseminating it has led to a repeating occurrence of censorship and unjust arrests of Moroccan journalists, widely criticized by human rights organizations and NGOs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2014/02/19/dispatches-now-free-moroccan-journalist-still-faces-terrorism-charges|title=Dispatches: Now Free, Moroccan Journalist Still Faces Terrorism Charges|last=Goldstein|first=Eric|date=February 19, 2014|website=Human Rights Watch}}</ref> Ali Anouzla, editor of an online newspaper, was convicted on terrorism charges in 2013.<ref name=":9">{{Cite web|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2013/9/25/morocco-journalist-accused-of-terrorism|title=Morocco journalist accused of ‘terrorism’|last=Alami|first=Aida|date=September 25, 2013|website=Al Jazeera}}</ref> He wrote and published an article on Al-Qaeda's presence in North Africa, accompanied by a link to another newspaper showing a video made by the terrorist group.<ref name=":10">{{Cite web|url=https://rsf.org/en/drop-all-charges-against-moroccan-journalist-ali-anouzla-let-him-go-free-once-and-all|title=Drop All Charges Against Moroccan Journalist Ali Anouzla – Let Him Go Free, Once and For All|date=January 21, 2016|website=Reporters Without Borders}}</ref> Anouzla was accused of "material assistance" to a terrorist organization, "defending terrorism" and "inciting the execution of terrorist acts" under the Penal Code's Article 218.<ref>''Id''. </ref> Just a few months prior to his conviction, Anouzla had covered a story about a Spanish pedophile sentenced to 30 years in prison in Morocco who was then pardoned by the King.<ref name=":9" /> The article caused widespread outrage and led to the reversal of the King's decision and the reimprisonment of the criminal – a case without precedent in Morocco.<ref>''Id''. </ref> Anouzla "knew the time for retribution would come."<ref>''Id''.</ref> Anouzla's Al Qaeda article showed undeniable objectivity and was similarly phrased to many other publications on the same topic which gives his defense of deliberate targeting and censorship serious legitimacy.<ref name=":10" /> Human Rights Watch commented the following on Anazoula's case: “Authorities have conflated reporting and inciting. Jailing the messenger won’t make extremists go away, but it will intimidate other journalists who report on them.”<ref name=":9" />
During the same year as Anouzla's conviction, Mustapha El Hasnaoui, was arrested on the basis of terrorism related charges under the Penal Code. El Hasnaoui, in his capacity as a journalist, had been in contact with individuals from Syria who were opposed to their then sitting government.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/press-release/2014/05/morocco-stop-using-terrorism-pretext-imprison-journalists/|title=Morocco: Stop using ‘terrorism’ as a pretext to imprison journalists|date=May 20, 2014|website=Amnesty International}}</ref> El Hasnaoui refused to denounce them to the state as suspected terrorists for lack of information.<ref>''Id''.</ref> El Hasnaoui had previously rejected multiple offers from the government to join Morocco's intelligence services and contends that his wrongful arrest and unfair trial was direct retaliation against his desire to remain independent.<ref>''Id''.</ref>
As a result of these politically charged arrests, the Moroccan communications regime is under fire for using terrorism as a pretext to censor and wrongfully imprison journalists. There exists a clear discrepancy between the Penal Code and the Press Code, the latter which should be the first point of reference when scrutinizing journalistic material regardless of its nature. Press coverage of terrorist activity in Morocco is criminalized almost de facto and worse yet, relied upon for censorship in furtherance of pre-existing political motives.
== Truth, Honor & Tolerance ==
[[File:Sunshine on mosque Hassan II in Casablanca, Morocco - Flickr - Milamber's portfolio.jpg|thumb|350x350px|Sunrise on the Hasan II Mosque, the third largest mosque in Africa]]
As established above, Islam is the official religion of the Moroccan Kingdom. The King is referred to in the Moroccan Constitution as the "Commander of the Faithful [who] sees to the respect for Islam," but is also "the Guarantor of the free exercise of beliefs."<ref name=":1" /> Moroccan jurisprudence is not sharia-centered (Islamic law) contrary to what many may reasonably assume, but Islamic principles nonetheless influence several areas of Moroccan law and its practical enforcement – especially personal status and family law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://campaignforjustice.musawah.org/repository/morocco/|title=Global Repository of Muslim Family Laws|last=Bouzghaia|first=Ilyass|website=Musawah for Equality in the Family}}</ref> These same principles have shaped society's understanding of honor, truth and their respective parameters.<ref name=":11" /> The prevalence of Islamic tones within the fabric of the Moroccan social and legal order is not met with much pushback or construed as intolerant, considering that 99% of Moroccans are Muslim and have been for centuries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/religious-beliefs-in-morocco.html|title=Religious Beliefs In Morocco|last=Sawe|first=Benjamin Elisha|date=April 25, 2017|website=World Atlas}}</ref> The relationship of Islam to the modern Moroccan state is characterized by "the values of openness, of moderation, of tolerance, and of dialog for mutual understanding between all the cultures and the civilizations of the world;"<ref name=":1" /> yet, hate speech is layered with Islamic customary law and blasphemy remains one of the three red line subjects around which communication is frequently censored and sanctioned. Though the government, including the King in a 2022 public address,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://en.hespress.com/46655-king-mohammed-vi-calls-for-gender-equality-reforms-during-throne-day-speech.html|title=King Mohammed VI calls for family code reform during Throne Day speech|date=July 30, 2022|website=Hespress English}}</ref> continues to manifest a national intention to further separate church and state, sharia-based Penal Code provisions are drawn on by authorities to advance political objectives more often than to punish unislamic conduct.
=== Hate Speech & Religious Intolerance ===
==== Extramarital Relationships ====
Extramarital relations or adultery are not only prohibited by Islamic law but also criminalized by Articles 490 and 491 of the Moroccan Penal Code.<ref name=":14" /> The Code indeed attaches up to two years of prison time to individuals stepping out of an existing marriage or engaging in pre-marital relations.<ref>''Id''.</ref> This norm is deeply engrained within Moroccan society's notion of honor, and was further reinforced by French colonial institutionalization of Christian morality and values within the Penal Code.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/documents/cfi-subm/2308/subm-colonialism-sexual-orientation-oth-ourkiya.pdf|title=Gender and Sexual Orientation in Postcolonial Morocco: An overview|last=Ourkiya|first=Asmae|website=OHCHR}}</ref> Moroccan authorities however, have grown increasingly tolerant of extramarital relationships in recent decades and very sporadically enforce the applicable portion of the Code, though it was never formally amended.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://medium.com/@emmadavis/behind-closed-doors-f0cbc7d42a99|title=Behind Closed Doors|last=Davis|first=Emma|date=August 25, 2015|website=Medium}}</ref> In fact, the Justice Minister put an end to the long established practice of requiring couples at hotels to present a marriage certificate before booking a room in 2023.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2024/05/19102/moroccans-divided-over-lifted-ban-on-marriage-certificate-requirement-in-hotels/|title=Moroccans Divided Over Lifted Ban on Marriage Certificate Requirement in Hotels|last=Zouiten|first=Sara|date=May 27, 2024|website=Morocco World News}}</ref> Dating publicly carved its place in Moroccan society and turning a blind eye to the implications of this new reality serves the greater good by preserving law enforcement resources, and better aligning with the ICCPR's right to privacy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2019/12/04/morocco-landmark-proposals-individual-freedoms|title=Morocco: Landmark Proposals on Individual Freedoms|date=December 4, 2019|website=Human Rights Watch}}</ref>
Moroccan authorities do not always choose to display tolerance for extramarital relationships however, and use the Penal Code as a fallback to control and censor communication. Hicham Mansouri, a Moroccan journalist who had been working on a piece about electronic state surveillance, was arrested for adultery along with his partner and sentenced to 10 months in prison in 2015.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gijn.org/stories/the-moroccan-journalist-who-fled-his-country/|title=The Moroccan Journalist Who Fled His Country|last=Fournier|first=Gaelle|date=July 22, 2019|website=Global Investigative Journalism Network}}</ref> Mansouri believes to have been targeted and wrongfully arrested to suppress his findings on the government and prevent their public dissemination.<ref>''Id''.</ref> The lack of consistency in the government's tolerance of extramarital relationships and the arbitrary convictions which result should ring the alarm for the need to reform the relevant sections of the Penal Code and remove backup routes to censorship disguised as religious and legal morality.
==== Blasphemy ====
Article 267 of the Penal Code works hand in hand with Article 70 of the Press Code to prohibit and criminalize blasphemous speech.<ref name=":12" /><ref name=":13" /> Blasphemy is sanctioned by the Penal Code by up to 2 years of prison time and $22,000 in fines.<ref name=":13" /> The crime is broadly construed as speech which offends or is aimed at causing harm to Islam.<ref name=":15">{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2025/09/11/morocco-exonerate-release-activist-sentenced-for-blasphemy|title=Morocco: Exonerate, Release Activist Sentenced for Blasphemy|date=September 11, 2025|website=Human Rights Watch}}</ref> As a piece of the three untouchable subjects in Morocco, blasphemous speech is considered to be one of the worst forms of hate speech and is not tolerated in any way or under any context, unlike other sharia-based offenses.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2015/04/119734/morocco-toughens-law-against-blasphemy-sexual-harassment/#google_vignette|title=Morocco Toughens Law Against Blasphemy, Sexual Harassment|last=Arbaoui|first=Larbi|date=April 2, 2015|website=Morocco World News}}</ref> Though the Moroccan Constitution promotes pluralism of ideas and respect of all religions, speech mocking or discrediting Islam is a hard boundary.<ref name=":1" />
A human rights activist, Ibtissame Lachgar, was arrested and sentenced to 30 months in prison on blasphemy charges in addition to incurring a fine of $5,500 in 2025.<ref name=":15" /> Lachgar posted a picture of herself on social media wearing a shirt with the slogan "Allah is a lesbian" printed on it.<ref>''Id''.</ref> While the Moroccan communications regime approach to blasphemy may be regarded as extreme relative to international standards, it is at least consistent and predictable and does not seem to be leveraged as a way to accomplish covert political goals.
== Cultural and Religious Expressions ==
Morocco represents the confessional state par excellence. The established religion of the Kingdom and its interaction with Morocco's communications law regime has become a pervasive theme across this project but deserves to be zoomed on further as it manifests through religious and cultural festivals, and as it creates space for wider religious tolerance and secularism in parallel. Islam was introduced to Western North Africa in the early eighth century and rapidly meshed in with pre-existing traditions though the two customs were vastly divergent, if not outright contradictory.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1385007?casa_token=hafVZv9XaPkAAAAA%3AhPyKoUQ48sajpl_Rn6IMQ6LuXwCDSdF0abnhsloC4_wh9LnI8R6zTVQ0vHvFrozoBtn2wxZWdQZWfRYl7B4wOPqbPSA2-zFmb47OjNdZRM1kxzO2TpWQ&seq=1|title=Islam and Society-Formation in Morocco Past and Present|last=Hagopian|first=Elaine|date=1963|website=Jstor}}</ref> This unique intertwining of culture and spirituality is relatively absent in other confessional Muslim states across the Middle East and thus coined as "Moroccan Islam."<ref>''Id''.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/385062930_Morocco's_Distinctive_Islam_at_a_Crossroads_The_State's_Support_for_Sufism|title=Morocco’s Distinctive Islam at a Crossroads: The State’s Support for Sufism|last=Faitour|first=Mouad|date=2024|website=Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)}}</ref> It is distinguished by its centrality on "strict adherence to the Maliki madhhab [Islamic school of thought], the veneration of the Prophet [pbuh] and the glorification of popularly acclaimed saints," as well as the legitimization of the royal family by virtue of its claimed holy lineage.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://api.taylorfrancis.com/content/books/mono/download?identifierName=doi&identifierValue=10.4324/9780429293122&type=googlepdf|title=The Power of Islam in Morocco: Historical and Anthropological Perspectives|last=El Mansour|first=Mohamed|date=2020|website=Taylor & Francis Group}}</ref> This religious amalgam is so emblematic of the Moroccan social makeup that it is acknowledged in the preamble of the Constitution which attributes it to "the convergence of its Arab Islamist, Berber [amazighe] and Saharan-Hassanic [saharo-hassanie] components, nourished and enriched by its African, Andalusian, Hebraic and Mediterranean influences."<ref name=":16">{{Cite web|url=https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Morocco_2011.pdf?lang=en|title=Morocco's Constitution of 2011|date=2012|website=Constitute Project}}</ref> Morocco's national cultural heritage laws and institutions as well as its commitment to international conventions insulate the right to organize and participate in feasts and festivals, though it remains unenumerated in the law.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/statesparties/ma|title=Morocco|website=UNESCO}}</ref><ref name=":02">{{Cite web|url=https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1043&context=jetlaw|title=The Right to Feast and Festivals|last=Riofrio|first=Juan C.|date=2021|website=HeinOnline|publisher=Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law}}</ref> While continued religious adherence to a singular faith is palpable in Morocco through its mosques at every street corner, its resounding calls to prayer, and its legal system's clear Islamic influences, cultural – and even un-Islamic –traditions plainly co-exist within this landscape.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.proquest.com/openview/d67085942480c47d50b89b670f3e51e8/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=5455932|title=Moroccan Culture and Religion in the 21st Century|last=Mbarek|first=Oukhouya Ali|date=Dec 2024|website=ProQuest|publisher=African Journal of Religion, Philosophy and Culture (AJRPC)}}</ref> Secularism and religious pluralism are moreover tolerated and accommodated as evidenced by the thousands of active churches and synagogues throughout the country or the Christmas trees and nativity scenes which rise across public spaces during the holidays of minority faiths.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/about/communities/MA|title=Morocco|website=World Jewish Congress}}</ref> Though imperfect in its neutrality and separation, Morocco presents a successful case study of the application of the principles of secularity and cooperation in a confessional state where festivals and feasts are treated as an informal right rooted in customary law.
=== The Co-Existence of Culture and Religion Through Festivals ===
[[File:Bwjlwd.jpg|left|thumb|400x400px|Boujloud Festival celebrated in the city of Agadir in 2020 Captured by Imad Bennaceur]]
Major Islamic holidays are loudly celebrated by the state and the general public alike in Morocco, as is characteristic of the typical confessional state. The most festive of these holidays is Eid Al-Adha, or the Feast of Sacrifice, which involves the slaughter of a sheep in commemoration of Prophet Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his only son for the sake of God.<ref name=":22">{{Cite web|url=https://dn711206.ca.archive.org/0/items/TheFiqhOfEidAlAdha/TheFiqhOfEidAlAdha.pdf|title=The Fiqh of Eid Al-Adha|website=Archive.org}}</ref> Royal decree No. 2.05.916 of 2005 renders Eid Al-Adha a national religious holiday to be announced yearly by the head of government, and regulates working days and hours to allow for celebration and observance of the religious rituals associated with this holiday.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cg.gov.ma/en/node/12377|title=Exceptional Holiday on the Occasion of Eid al-Adha|date=May 30, 2025|website=Kingdom of Morocco Head of Government|archive-date=}}</ref> Up to three working days are declared public holidays for the occasion of Eid Al-Adha alone and employers who violate this mandate –regardless of their own or their employees confessional adherence – are subject to legal liability under the Moroccan Labour Code's Article 217.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mmsp.gov.ma/fr/nos-metiers/horaires-de-travail-et-jours-f%C3%A9ri%C3%A9s?|title=Horaires de travail et jours fériés|website=Ministère de la Transition Numérique et de la Réforme de l'Administration}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/legislation/details/7371|title=Loi n° 99-65 relative au Code du Travail (promulguée par Dahir n° 1-03-194|date=September 11, 2003|website=WIPO}}</ref> Though Eid Al-Adha can represent a temporary economic slowdown, it is valued by the state as not only a primordial religious duty but a tool of national cohesion and a means of honoring the state's commitment to freedom of religion and cultural participation rights under the UDHR, the ICCPR, the ICESCR as well as the African Charter.<ref name=":32">{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=r92qEQAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PT9&dq=eid+el+adha+morocco&ots=g308Ob2CLU&sig=OgskrYQvBHT_KCU7i8WxMs35No0#v=onepage&q=eid%20el%20adha%20morocco&f=false|title=Morocco - Culture Smart!: The Essential Guide to Customs & Culture|last=York|first=Jillian C.|website=Google Books}}</ref><ref name=":72">{{Cite web|url=https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/international-covenant-civil-and-political-rights|title=International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights|date=December 16, 1966|website=Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights}}</ref><ref name=":42">{{Cite web|url=https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/international-covenant-economic-social-and-cultural-rights|title=International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights|date=December 16, 1966|website=Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/AFRICAN-BANJUL-CHARTER-ON-HUMAN-AND-PEOPLES-RIGHTS.pdf|title=AFRICAN (BANJUL) CHARTER ON HUMAN AND PEOPLES' RIGHTS|website=African-Court}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal-declaration-of-human-rights|title=Universal Declaration of Human Rights|website=United Nations}}</ref> The observance of this holiday and the days of rest consecrated to its celebration are treated as an unspoken right of Moroccan citizens and residents, and end in and of itself.<ref name=":02" /> King Mohammed VI described the importance of the celebration of Eid Al-Adha as follows: "The celebration of this feast is not a fleeting occasion; rather, it carries strong religious meanings, reflecting the deep connection of My faithful subjects with the various aspects of our Sacred religion and their will to draw closer to the Almighty and to strengthen social and family ties through this revered occasion."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cg.gov.ma/en/node/12213?utm_source=chatgpt.com|title=HM the King, Commander of the Faithful, Sends Message to His Faithful People Regarding Abstention from Performing Eid Sacrifice Ritual|date=February 26, 2025|website=Head of Government}}</ref>
Eid customs in Morocco satisfy all four elements of the feast and are as such protected by the Moroccan government which itself actively participates in the festival.<ref name=":02" /> Muslims beyond Morocco partake in Eid Al-Adha primarily because it is mentioned in the Quran and is a 'sunnah,' or a practice of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh);<ref name=":22" /> but in Morocco specifically, where poverty and food diversification remains a challenge, Eid Al-Adha represents some Moroccans' main yearly source of meat and thus another reason to celebrate.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/morocco/publication/poverty-in-morocco-challenges-and-opportunities|title=Poverty in Morocco: Challenges and Opportunities|date=April 9, 2018|website=World Bank Group}}</ref> Indeed, the Statistics and Forecasts Office reports that Eid Al-Adha sheep amount to 41% of the yearly meat expense for the poorest 10% of Moroccan households.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://barlamantoday.com/2024/06/11/moroccan-household-meat-consumption-increases-during-feast-of-sacrifice-hcp/|title=Moroccan Household Meat Consumption Increases during Feast of Sacrifice, HCP|last=Essassi|first=Donya|date=June 11, 2024|website=Barlaman Today}}</ref> Eid celebrations commence with believers wearing their finest clothing to congregate by the thousands for morning Eid prayer.<ref name=":52">{{Cite web|url=https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2024/06/18353/eid-al-adha-in-morocco-a-celebration-of-faith-and-tradition/|title=Eid Al Adha in Morocco: A Celebration of Faith and Tradition|last=Daoudi|first=Asmae|date=June 17, 2024|website=Morocco World News}}</ref> The King, or Commander of the Faithful, is broadcasted on national television every year as he and his family attend Eid prayer and later observe the sacrificial ritual.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://en.hespress.com/112674-video-king-mohammed-vi-performs-eid-al-adha-prayer-in-tetouan.html|title=Video: King Mohammed VI performs Eid Al Adha prayer in Tetouan|date=June 7, 2025|website=Hespress English}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKn6q-LbmDg|title=Roi Mohammed VI Aïd Al-Adha la mosquée Hassan II de (Tétouan)|date=June 7, 2025|website=Youtube}}</ref> As the head of state, this public airing of the King's personal practice is a symbolic reaffirmation of the state's creedal identity. Families across the country simultaneously reunite to go through the steps of the religious sacrifice together, cook and eat meals specifically dedicated to Eid Al-Adha using the sacrificed animal(s)'s meat, and spend the rest of the day rejoicing and celebrating at the sound of both traditional music and religious chants.<ref name=":52" /> Leftover meat is traditionally frozen and given to charity or used by families for up to months after the celebration of Eid Al-Adha.<ref>''Id''.</ref>
[[File:Boujloud.jpg|thumb|350x350px|Close-Up of Boujloud costumes Captured by Hassan Ahachi]]
"Morocco is a land of vivid contrasts"<ref name=":32" /> and Eid Al-Adha is by that token not celebrated in isolation. The Boujloud festival quickly emerges in the days following Eid Al-Adha, primarily in the Southern regions of Morocco including Agadir and the Souss Valley.<ref name=":52" /> Boujloud translates to "the father of skins" and evokes airs of halloween or the day of the dead whereby young men clothe themselves in sheep skin and paint their faces to march through the streets accompanied by music, dance and laughter.<ref>''Id''.</ref> While the theme of the sheep may suggest an extension of Eid Al-Adha celebrations Boujloud, like Halloween, has pre-islamic pagan roots.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://medium.com/@benznanamohamed/the-boujloud-carnival-moroccos-intriguing-mosaic-of-tradition-rebellion-and-revelry-b0437e5844af|title=The Boujloud Carnival: Morocco’s Intriguing Mosaic of Tradition, Rebellion, and Revelry|last=Benznana|first=Mohamed|date=July 8, 2023|website=Medium}}</ref> The festival originates in Berber or Amazigh tradition as well as Christian and Jewish folklore, and represents the eternal punishment of a man turned animal after offending the sanctity of a holy place.<ref>''Id''.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://moroccotomorrow.org/the-jajouka-master-musicians-a-universal-hymn-to-tolerance-and-peace-from-morocco-to-the-world-analysis/|title=The Jajouka Master Musicians: A Universal Hymn To Tolerance And Peace From Morocco To The World – Analysis|date=September 16, 2019|website=Morocco Tomorrow}}</ref> By celebrating this pagan tradition right after an Islamic holiday of all times, some scholars have interpreted the festival as going counter to Islamic law and principles.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2024/06/18355/boujloud-where-sheepskins-and-spirits-intertwine/|title=Boujloud: Where Sheepskins and Spirits Intertwine|last=Faouzi|first=Adil|date=June 17, 2024|website=Morocco World News}}</ref> Yet, the Moroccan state protects the people's right to celebrate Boujloud as part of their cultural heritage under the Moroccan Constitution and UNESCO norms. Indeed, the Constitution expressly recognizes the right to indigenous cultural expression under Article 5 while the ICESCR highlights the right to take part in cultural life.<ref name=":16" /><ref name=":42" /> The King has also established the Royal Institute of Amazigh Culture which supports and funds indigenous cultural celebrations like Boujloud.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ircam.ma/fr/textes-fondateurs/texte-du-dahir|title=Texte du Dahir|website=Institut Royal de la Culture Amazighe}}</ref> In conjunction, Morocco is party to the UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of which Article 2 specifically protects "social practices, rituals and festive events."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/convention|title=Text of the Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage|website=UNESCO}}</ref> While the right to feasts and festivals is not formally enshrined in Moroccan or international law, Morocco has proved successful and consistent at safeguarding it indirectly under its customary law and ensuring the continued celebration of festivals like Boujloud despite their un-Islamic nature.
=== The Place of Secularism in Morocco ===
Feasts and festivals need not be strictly religious or cultural in nature to be afforded protection under the state, and Morocco holds many such celebrations for which the reason to feast is completely secular.<ref name=":02" /> The protection of secular festivals finds footing partly in the Moroccan Constitution which guarantees the freedom of religion, thought and opinion as well as the public powers' support "to the development of cultural and artistic creation . . . in an independent manner and on democratic" bases.<ref name=":16" /> The ICCPR's rights to freedom of assembly, including public festivals, further supports an informal right to secular feasts and festivals.
One of the most prominent secular festivals in Morocco is the Mawazine music festival established in 2001 under the direct authority of King Mohammed VI.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://mawazine.ma/en/le-festival-mawazine/presentation-du-festival/|title=Presentation|website=Mawazine.ma}}</ref> Mawazine takes place yearly in the Kingdom's capital, Rabat, and hosts some of the world's most popular artists the likes of Rihanna, Shakira, or Pitbull.<ref>''Id''.</ref> The given reason for the festival, beyond respect for and advancement of art, is the "promotion of the Kingdom’s values and uphold[ing] a message of tolerance, openness, respect and dialogue" as well as the "democratization of culture in Morocco."<ref>''Id''.</ref> The festival attracts up to two million friends and families every year who gather to dance, sing, and cheer on their favorite performers.<ref>''Id''.</ref> This being said, the majority of renowned secular feasts and festivals in Morocco remain under state control or royal patronage which creates significant risk for potential censorship and over-regulation of independent and secular celebrations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?public=true&handle=hein.journals/mistjintl32&div=6&start_page=25&collection=journals&set_as_cursor=0&men_tab=srchresults|title=STRUGGLES AND TRIUMPHS: AMAZIGH CONSTITUTIONAL CLAIMS AND BUREAUCRATIC DISENTITLEMENT IN MOROCCO|last=Castaneda|first=Heide|website=HeinOnline}}</ref>
== Sources Cited ==
jdba9chupswpoo8woo358w7g227xw62
User:Dekatriofovia
2
328326
2809109
2800519
2026-05-14T10:19:29Z
Dekatriofovia
3058633
temporary diary while I'm ordering a new monitor
2809109
wikitext
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Disclosure: I created an alt account called [[User:ThinkingScience]] which should never be allowed to vote or participate in a way that a regular account does and if you see any such voting behavior etc. please block that account. Thank you!
As planned I am editing both this userpage and the userpage on the alt I created. Then you know it's me: User:Dekatriofovia
== Main idea, should be on my alt account ==
* The diary of this "main account": [[User:Dekatriofovia/Temporary_ND_Inspired_Idea_Notebook|Temporary Daily Diary of ND Inspired Idea]]
** My alt diary [[User:ThinkingScience/ND_Inspired_Idea_Notebook|Daily Diary of ND Inspired Idea]]
== Coursera, most notes should be on my alt account ==
I've started '''Coursera''' since March 14, 2026. I don't understand completely what it is but I might assume it's some sort of "course material" and that there are no classmates and no "teachers".
I don't understand what's going on but I'm thinking about creating notes.
The course I'm on is "Classical Sociological Theory" and I can put my '''course notes''' in draft space.
Here: [[User:Dekatriofovia/Draftspace/Coursera]]
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2809127
2809109
2026-05-14T11:10:58Z
Dekatriofovia
3058633
Alt Reference 1 created
2809127
wikitext
text/x-wiki
Disclosure: I created an alt account called [[User:ThinkingScience]] which should never be allowed to vote or participate in a way that a regular account does and if you see any such voting behavior etc. please block that account. Thank you!
As planned I am editing both this userpage and the userpage on the alt I created. Then you know it's me: User:Dekatriofovia
== Main idea, should be on my alt account ==
* The diary of this "main account": [[User:Dekatriofovia/Temporary_ND_Inspired_Idea_Notebook|Temporary Daily Diary of ND Inspired Idea]]
** My alt diary [[User:ThinkingScience/ND_Inspired_Idea_Notebook|Daily Diary of ND Inspired Idea]]
== Coursera, most notes should be on my alt account ==
I've started '''Coursera''' since March 14, 2026. I don't understand completely what it is but I might assume it's some sort of "course material" and that there are no classmates and no "teachers".
I don't understand what's going on but I'm thinking about creating notes.
The course I'm on is "Classical Sociological Theory" and I can put my '''course notes''' in draft space.
Here: [[User:Dekatriofovia/Draftspace/Coursera]]
== References ==
Rather use [[User:ThinkingScience]] when possible. Much better for my health!
=== Alt Reference 1 ===
I chose Stephen Colbert even though the first video I chose/choose to watch to do my video notes in, and I want it to be in a "Do no harm" way, is a comedy video but I'm hoping that my notes will be respectful both to Tom Hanks and to Stephen Colbert.
Anyway the notes I later plan to add can be very "neutral". In the end if nothing else was allowed, only saying "these two people are alike" or saying they are not may be enough. According to this "idea" it's very hard to find 2 people who are alike in the way that is based on my "idea", because it assumes a "perfect match". Any questions about this choice, please visit my talk page and let me know there. Thank you!
qeu2waxs74jfhlzddgod1cpspqcfkkh
User:Codename Noreste/sandbox
2
328878
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2026-05-14T00:50:15Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
Testing a new header.
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Pluringualism in the CEFR
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{{Education}}{{Course}}
The CEFR is a council of european guideline that organises language skills in six levels: A1- C2.
The contexts that concern the CEFR are educational and professional. It's very important for the evaluation of language skills in training and work environments.
I have heard of language levels at school, because I'm a teacher, and now I teach italian to adult students in CPIA 4 of Rome.In my previous career experience in a primay school, I've worked with foreign kids.
== Starting activity ==
Start by thinking about the following:
* What do you know about the CEFR?
* In what context is the CEFR discussed? You can search online to find information about the CEFR.
* In what context have you heard of language levels (A1 to C2)?
Consult the first edition of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (Council of Europe, 2001). You will find different language versions [https://www.coe.int/fr/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/cefr-and-its-language-versions on this page in French] and [https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/cefr-and-its-language-versions this page in English]. Read the (short) section 1.3, which defines the term ‘plurilingualism’ for the authors of the CEFR. List what you consider important, for example:
* the distinction made between multilingualism and plurilingualism;
* what the plurilingual approach emphasises;
* what a plurilingual person is capable of doing;
* the objective of language teaching and learning according to the CEFR.
== Objectives ==
By the end of this section, you should be able to…
* explain how the CEFR, in its original version and its Companion Volume (CEFR-CV), defines and addresses plurilingualism and plurilingual education;
* identify the developments and differences between the original 2001 version and the Companion Volume;
* provide a critical opinion on the status of plurilingualism in the CEFR and the CEFR-CV.
== Key-words ==
Plurilingualism, CEFR, Companion Volume, plurilingual competence, plurilingual education
== Introduction ==
In 2001, the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (Council of Europe, 2001) proposed a new approach to language teaching and learning. It promoted an ‘action-oriented’ approach that has become widely adopted in Europe and beyond – at least in theory. It also provides (primarily) competence descriptors for various language activities. These have also become widely adopted internationally. The authors of the Framework make another suggestion that has been less successful. They propose changing the objective of language teaching and learning. The aim would no longer be to achieve proficiency in several languages, but to help learners develop plurilingual and pluricultural competence. This should enable them to
* manage their entire language repertoire to communicate more effectively by drawing on all their resources;
* and to activate their existing knowledge and skills to learn new languages.
The authors thus aim to overcome the compartmentalisation of language teaching and learning. This could have been a revolution, but its implementation has remained limited in education systems. However, various projects have been funded by the Council of Europe through the European Centre for Modern Languages (in particular the development of a ''Framework of reference for pluralistic approaches'' (Candelier et al., 2007, 2012)) and others by the European Commission. The Council of Europe very quickly recognised the difficulty of moving from an educational language policy objective to the reality of language teaching and learning in institutions. It therefore published various guides and additional studies (Beacco, 2007; Beacco et al., 2016; Beacco & Byram, 2003; Coste et al., 2009; Lenz & Berthele, 2010) and, finally, a Companion Volume to the CEFR. This reaffirms the commitment to establishing plurilingual education and emphasises its importance.
This section will highlight this evolution from the original volume to the Companion Volume.
== History ==
Plurilingualism is both a human characteristic and a social practice. This phenomenon has existed for far longer than the terms used today to describe it. The history of humanity thus offers numerous examples of plurilingualism. Let us take just one illustrative example: Giovanni Pontano, known as the ‘Gran Pontano’. A politician and intellectual at the court of King Ferdinand in Naples (1458–1494), he practised plurilingualism in his daily life. His example also reflects a largely plurilingual society at the end of the 15th century (Bistagne, 2019).
Similarly, the idea of teaching plurilingualism does not date from the Council of Europe’s recent language policies. It has deep historical roots.
The educator Jan Amos Comenius is regarded as one of the first to have developed an educational approach to plurilingualism. In his *Didactica Magna* (1657), he recommends learning only those languages that will be useful in the future — such as the languages of neighbouring countries, academic or professional languages — in addition to one’s mother tongue. For him, the aim was not to achieve perfection in all languages, but to develop functional proficiency.
Furthermore, many education systems have incorporated the use of multiple languages, but this does not always mean they aim for plurilingualism. Some models, such as the Utraquist schools in the Austrian part of the Habsburg Monarchy, facilitate transitions from one language to another, without seeking to keep all languages in use. Other approaches, however, explicitly aim to preserve a minority language. This is the case with the community schools established in France from the 1970s onwards, such as Diwan (in Breton), Ikastola (in Basque) or Calandreta (in Occitan), which are examples of plurilingual educational models.
== From the original volume to the Companion Volume ==
=== Definition of "plurilingualism" and goal of the CEFR ===
Let us go back for a moment to the first activity on the concept of plurilingualism in the CEFR (reading chapter 1.3). In the following chapter (1.4), the text establishes a link between language and culture. Plurilingualism is placed within a broader framework: that of pluriculturalism. Thus, plurilingual competence is presented as a component of pluricultural competence.
To highlight this link, and drawing on a preparatory study for the Framework (Coste, Moore & Zarate, 2009, though an earlier version from 1997 exists), the CEFR defines the concept of plurilingual and pluricultural competence as follows (Chapter 8.1):
the ability to use languages for the purposes of communication and to take part in intercultural interaction, where a person, viewed as a social agent has proficiency, of varying degrees, in several languages and experience of several cultures. This is not seen as the superposition or juxtaposition of distinct competences, but rather as the existence of a complex or even composite competence on which the user may draw (Council of Europe, 2001, p. 168).
In other words, it is not about separate competences for each language or culture, but rather a single, holistic and flexible competence, within which a person can draw on different resources depending on the situation. This plurilingual and pluricultural competence encompasses all of an individual’s languages and cultural experiences — that is to say, their entire linguistic repertoire. With regard to language curricula, the CEFR recommends approaching different languages in relation to one another, rather than as separate entities. It identifies three main approaches to achieving this:
* linking the learning of one language to the other languages offered, with a focus on linguistic diversity;
* avoiding redundancy and encouraging the transfer of competences between languages;
* providing for cross-curricular or transferable knowledge, as part of a holistic language education.
The ultimate goal of the curriculum, according to the CEFR, is to enable learners to develop an early plurilingual and pluricultural repertoire, as well as greater awareness, knowledge and confidence in their own competences, so that they can actively draw upon them (Council of Europe, 2001, pp. 129–134).
=== The paradoxes of the CEFR (2001 version) ===
The CEFR promotes the development of plurilingual competence but provides no real guidance on how to achieve this, nor any descriptors relating to it. All the descriptors in the 2001 version can be used to assess levels of competence in specific languages, but they overlook plurilingual competence.
The same applies to the grids of the European Language Portfolio (ELP), a Council of Europe project launched in line with the CEFR concept. The self-assessment section and the passport encourage learners to self-assess their competences in various languages. The passport allows users to visualise a profile of competences across various languages. It thus partly corresponds to the definition by Coste, Moore and Zarate adopted by the CEFR. This definition states that plurilingual and pluricultural competence is a “existence of a complex or even composite competence on which the social actor may draw (Coste et al. 2009, p. v).
”. The portfolio helps one recognise that one does not possess a homogeneous level in a single language or across different languages. However, this remains fairly close to a conception of plurilingualism that juxtaposes competences across different languages.
The dynamic nature of plurilingual competence is particularly evident in the reflective section of the PEL.
The Companion Volume aims to address the absence of this dimension by proposing specific descriptors for plurilingual competence and mediation.
=== Development of the Companion Volume (CEFR-CV) ===
The CEFR-CV is the result of in-depth reflection on the impact of the CEFR published in 2001, and on the need to incorporate more recent developments in the field of language teaching and learning. Five years after its publication, a survey showed that the CEFR had become the most important document in Europe for language teaching. It helped to harmonise approaches to language teaching and learning by creating a common metalanguage and common reference points. However, despite this success, it did not lead to a fundamental reform of language education based on the concepts it introduced.
It is primarily the levels and descriptors that have attracted attention. Widely adopted, they are sometimes perceived not as a reference system, but as rigid standards. As Coste (2007, p. 4) observes:<blockquote>[…] the Framework was seen as a European standard, a kind of prescription or injunction, with contexts being forced, willy-nilly, to fit it - because it came from a European institution, and because other countries, regions, educational establishments, textbook publishers or authors, curriculum planners and test developers took its B2 or C1 as their target and benchmark.</blockquote>In contrast, other concepts have had less impact, such as the action-oriented approach, mediation and plurilingualism (North 2023, p. 2), or the view of the learner as a social actor (CEFR Expert Group, 2023, p. 17). Plurilingualism is thus one of the concepts whose adoption has remained limited since the publication of the CEFR.
Several explanations, both conceptual and practical, can be put forward.
The simplistic interpretation of the distinction between plurilingualism (individual) and multilingualism (society) does not reflect the complexity of the concept. The CEFR-CV therefore emphasises the idea that the addition of distinct languages (multilingualism) and the overcoming of the separation of languages (plurilingualism) can be achieved both in individuals and within communities (CEFR Expert Group, 2023, p. 32).
The CEFR does not provide descriptors for plurilingual competence or for mediation. The operational contribution of the CEFR-CV fills this gap (Yüce, 2019, p. 96).
The CEFR is sometimes regarded as complex and difficult to understand. The CEFR-CV has therefore been designed to be clearer, more accessible and easier to use than the previous version (Council of Europe, 2020, pp. 13–15; North, 2023, p. 1).
=== Plurilingualism in the Companion Volume ===
It should be noted from the outset that the CEFR-CV introduces a series of significant changes that go beyond the issue of plurilingualism alone. Among these changes is the adaptation to sign language, with the development of descriptors for signing proficiency. In this section, only the developments relating to plurilingualism will be presented.
The CEFR-CV forms part of a broader framework: among the recent developments it takes into account (mentioned at the start of the previous section) is the Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture (RFCDC). For an overview of all the developments, please refer to section 2.2 of the 2023 Guide. The philosophy of the RFCDC plays a key role in the CEFR-CV: it broadens the scope of language education by promoting inclusive, plurilingual and intercultural education in the service of democracy, social justice and human rights (CEFR Expert Group, 2023, p. 3).
Plurilingualism is highlighted in the CEFR-CV and addressed more explicitly than in the 2001 version. The CEFR-CV offers a broader vision of this, showing that plurilingualism can be understood in various ways: as a sociological and historical fact, as a personal characteristic or aspiration, as an educational philosophy or approach, or even as a socio-political objective aimed at preserving linguistic diversity. This broader vision is also reflected in the link established with the concept of ‘translanguaging’, which is considered here as part of plurilingualism (Council of Europe, 2021, p. 29).
With regard to plurilingualism, perhaps the most significant contribution of the CEFR-CV is the introduction of illustrative descriptors for plurilingual and pluricultural competence — tools that were lacking in the original version (North, 2023, p. 4). This competence builds on the CEFR 2001, reaffirming ‘[…] that plurilinguals have a ''single'', interrelated, repertoire that they combine with their general competences and various strategies in order to accomplish tasks’, and that plurilingual competence “involves the ability to call flexibly upon an interrelated, uneven, plurilinguistic repertoire” (Council of Europe, 2020, p. 30).
In Chapter 4, the new descriptors are presented. They are grouped into three distinct categories:<blockquote>
* Building on plurilingual repertoire
** recognising and acting on cultural, socio-pragmatic and sociolinguistic conventions/cues;
** recognising and interpreting similarities and differences in perspectives, practices and events;
** evaluating neutrally and critically (Council of Europe, 2020, 124).
* Plurilingual comprehension
** openness and flexibility to work with different elements from different languages;
** exploiting cues;
** exploiting similarities, recognising “false friends” (from B1 up);
** exploiting parallel sources in different languages (from B1 up);
** collating information from all available sources (in different languages) (Council of Europe, 2020, 126).
* Building on plurilingual repertoire
** flexible adaptation to the situation;
** anticipation as to when and to what extent the use of several languages is useful and appropriate;
** adjusting language according to the linguistic skills of interlocutors;
** blending and alternating between languages where necessary;
** explaining and clarifying in different languages;
** encouraging people to use different languages by giving an example (Council of Europe, 2020, 127).
</blockquote>
=== Pros and cons of the new developments: expected changes and criticism ===
The publication of the CEFR-V is accompanied by hopes of revitalising language teaching and learning, placing greater emphasis on key concepts such as plurilingual and pluricultural competence (as well as the action-oriented approach, mediation and the recognition of the learner as a social actor) — rather than continuing to focus solely on proficiency levels and descriptors.
However, the CEFR-CV has also been the subject of criticism, with some even questioning its entire approach: for instance, Coste (2021) highlights the paradox of attempting to adapt something as dynamic as plurilingualism to fixed levels. Maurer and Puren’s (2019) critique focuses on conceptual ambiguities and confusions which they regard as structural, particularly in relation to the pluricultural competence grid. In their view, the CEFR-CV seeks above all to modernise the CEFR for the benefit of certification organisations (Maurer & Puren, p. 140). Volle (2022) goes further and refers to a dissolution of language in action. She sees the CEFR(-CV) as an ‘incredible tool for standardising and uniformising language teaching methods’ (Volle 2022, p. 144) within a managerial framework.
== Take home messages ==
* The CEFR promotes the development of plurilingual (and pluricultural) competence as an objective of language teaching and learning.
* The 2001 version does not provide descriptors for plurilingual competence.
* This lack of specific descriptors and the difficulty in moving towards a policy objective of plurilingual education led to the drafting and publication of a Companion Volume to the CEFR.
* The CEFR-CV is the result of in-depth reflection on the impact of the 2001 CEFR and on the need to incorporate more recent developments in the field of language teaching and learning (such as the CRCCD).
* The CEFR-CV promotes plurilingualism (as well as mediation, the action-oriented approach, and sign language) and adds new descriptors for plurilingual education.
* The new descriptors for plurilingual and pluricultural competence are grouped into three categories: pluricultural repertoire, plurilingual comprehension and plurilingual repertoire.
* Critics argue that the CEFR-CV contributes to the standardisation of language learning on a questionable conceptual basis.
== Self-assessment ==
=== Multiple choice ===
<quiz>
{Which of the recommendations made in the CEFR (2001) has been particularly successful in language teaching and learning in Europe?}
+1. Proficiency levels
-2. Plurilingualism
-3. The action-oriented approach
-4. Mediation
-5. Pluriculturalism
{Which new descriptors were introduced in the CEFR-CV (2020)?}
+1. Descriptors for plurilingual competence
+2. Descriptors for signing (using sign language)
-3. Descriptors for communicative action
-4. Descriptors for task-based teaching
{Which of the following statements are correct?}
-1. The CEFR-CV fundamentally modifies the concept of multilingualism proposed in the CEFR 2001.
+2. In the CEFR-CV, plurilingualism is conceived as a component of a culture of democracy.
-3. Sign languages are included in the CEFR 2001.
+4. Sign languages are included in the CEFR-CV.
+5. The CEFR-CV adopts the concept of a language repertoire.
</quiz>
=== Reflection ===
Consider the criticisms directed at the CEFR. Is the CEFR-CV better suited to promoting reform in language teaching and learning than its previous version?
Make a list of arguments ‘for’ and ‘against’.
== Resources to go further ==
* Webinar "Aligning to the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages – Companion Volume: a continuous process" (19 Sep 2024): https://www.youtube.com/live/5xslG-J7NTw
* Webinar "Opportunities and challenges for plurilingual and intercultural education in times of AI" (04 Feb 2025)
** Webinar in English: https://youtube.com/live/byO8nno1jmk
** Webinar in French: https://youtube.com/live/Z-FtmjB9VBk
* CEFR Expert Group. (2023). ''A guide to action-oriented, plurilingual and intercultural Education''. Council of Europe Publishing. https://rm.coe.int/a-guide-to-action-oriented-plurilingual-and-intercultural-education-en/1680b52354
* ECML: Plurilingual and intercultural education. https://www.ecml.at/en/Thematic-areas/Plurilingual-and-intercultural-education
* Linguistic Diversity in the European Union. https://www.anefore.lu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Linguistic-diversity-in-the-European-Union.pdf
* PlurCur: https://www.ecml.at/en/ECML-Programme/Programme-2012-2015/PlurCur
* Language friendly schools: https://languagefriendlyschool.org
* Online-books in different languages / Bilderbücher in verschiedenen Sprachen: https://www.amira-lesen.de/#
* Schule Merhsprachig Hefte. https://www.schule-mehrsprachig.at/trio/trio-ausgaben
* ALL: http://all-literature.wikidot.com/multilingual-online-sources-of-texts
* Lost Wor(l)ds: https://www.multilingualism-in-schools.net/category/activities/
== Bibliography ==
Beacco, J.-C. (2007). ''Guide pour le développement et la mise en oeuvre de curriculums pour une éducation plurilingue et interculturelle (version intégrale)''. Conseil de l’Europe. http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/Source/Guide_Main_Beacco2007_FR.doc
Beacco, J.-C., & Byram, M. (2003). ''De la diversité linguistique à l’éducation plurilingue. Guide pour l’élaboration des politiques linguistiques éducatives en Europe:'' Conseil de l’Europe. https://rm.coe.int/CoERMPublicCommonSearchServices/DisplayDCTMContent?documentId=09000016802fc3ab
Beacco, J.-C., Byram, M., Cavalli, M., Coste, D., Cuenat, M. E., Goullier, F., & Panthier, J. (2016). ''Guide pour le développement et la mise en oeuvre de curriculums pour une éducation plurilingue et interculturelle''. Editions du Conseil de l’Europe.
Bistagne, F (2019). Le plurilinguisme, objet d’histoire ? Le royaume de Naples et Giovanni Pontano. Étude de cas linguistique .In ''Écrire l’histoire - Histoire, Littérature, Esthétique'', 19, 117-125. https://hal.science/hal-02610631v1
Candelier, M., Camilleri-Grima, A., Castellotti, V., de Pietro, J.-F., Lörincz, I., Meißner, F.-J., Noguerol, A., & Schröder-Sura, A. (2007). ''CARAP : cadre de référence pour les approches plurielles des langues et des cultures''. Centre européen pour les langues vivantes.
Candelier, M., Camilleri-Grima, A., Castellotti, V., de Pietro, J.-F., Lörincz, I., Meißner, F.-J., Noguerol, A., & Schröder-Sura, A. (with Molinié, M.). (2012). ''CARAP : cadre de référence pour les approches plurielles des langues et des cultures''. Centre européen pour les langues vivantes / Conseil de l’Europe. https://www.ecml.at/Portals/1/documents/ECML-resources/CARAP-FR.pdf?ver=2018-03-20-120658-740
Caravolas, J.A. (2011). J.A. Comenius (1592-1670) et le plurilinguisme. In ''Documents pour l’histoire du français langue étrangère ou seconde'' [En ligne], 43 | 2009. https://doi.org/10.4000/dhfles.826
CEFR Expert Group. (2023). A guide to action-oriented, plurilingual and intercultural Education. Editions du Conseil de l’Europe, Strasbourg. Council of Europe Publishing. https://rm.coe.int/a-guide-to-action-oriented-plurilingual-and-intercultural-education-en/1680b52354
Conseil de l’Europe. (2001). ''Un cadre européen commun de référence pour les langues : Apprendre, enseigner, évaluer''. Didier ; Conseil de l’Europe. https://rm.coe.int/16802fc3a8
Conseil de l’Europe. (2021). ''Un cadre européen commun de référence pour les langues : apprendre, enseigner, évaluer – Volume complémentaire''. Éditions du Conseil de l’Europe. https://www.coe.int/lang-cecr.
Coste, D. (2007). Contextualising uses of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages. In Council of Europe, ''The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) and the development of language policies: challenges and responsibilities''. Intergovernmental Language Policy Forum. Report. Council of Europe.
Coste, D., Moore, D., & Zarate, G. (2009). ''Compétence plurilingue et pluriculturelle : Vers un cadre européen commun de référence pour l’enseignement et l’apprentissage des langues vivantes. Version révisée et enrichie d’un avant-propos et d’une bibliographie complémentaire''. Éditions du Conseil de l’Europe. https://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/Source/SourcePublications/CompetencePlurilingue09web_FR.pdf
Coste, D. (2021). De Rüschlikon au Volume complémentaire ou Du risque qu’il y a à passer sous les échelles. Vogt, K., & Quetz, J.(Éds.). ''Der neue Begleitband zum Gemeinsamen europäischen Referenzrahmen für Sprachen''. Peter Lang, 35-45.
Council of Europe (Éd.). (2001). ''Common European framework of reference for languages : Learning, teaching, assessment''. Press syndicate of the University of Cambridge.
Council of Europe. (2020). ''Common European framework of reference for languages : Learning, teaching, assessment. Companion volume''. Council of Europe. https://rm.coe.int/common-european-framework-of-reference-for-languages-learning-teaching/16809ea0d4.
Lenz, P., & Berthele, R. (2010). ''Prise en compte des compétences plurilingue et interculturelle dans l’évaluation''. Conseil de l’Europe. https://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/Source/Source2010_ForumGeneva/Assessment2010_Lenz_FRrev.pdf
Maurer, B. & Puren, C. (2019). ''CECR : par ici la sortie !'' Éditions des archives contemporaines. https://eac.ac/publications/9782813003522
North, B. (2023). The CEFR companion volume and the action-oriented approach. In ''ItalianoLinguadue'', 14(2), 1–23. https://doi.org/10.54103/2037-3597/19566
Volle, R.-M. (2022): Le CECR: une conception instrumentale et managériale des langues. ''Didactique du FLES: Recherches et Pratiques 1(1):'' 139-145).
Yüce, E. (2019). Plurilingualism and pluriculturalism in the CEFR companion volume. In ''Schriften zur Sprache und Literatur III'' (pp.93-99). https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337243142
== Credits ==
This resource has been created by [[User:Projet PEP|Projet PEP]] ([[User talk:Projet PEP|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Projet PEP|contribs]]) (Erasmus+ project, co-financed by the European Commission)
* Christian Ollivier (Université de La Réunion)
* Eva Vetter (Universität Wien)
gyyj9sdnae4qzvbg7xr2bhyal4qhlfx
Draft:The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/Method development through video notes
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{{AI-generated}}
== What {{tl|AI-generated}} means on this page ==
It means that the content on this page may be generated in the future. This is merely to "future-proof" this page as it may be assumed it is inevitable that one day even the content might be auto-generated and this notice existing might help students/contributors to let them know that there is a current "influence" by "AI programs" on this page, if not by content at least by influencing decisions.
If any content is generated contributors are encouraged to edit this section and make the appropriate changes to let students know that there has been a change.
What it means for now is that the contributors to this page are encouraged to interact with an "AI"/LLM in regards to
* decision-making on what to focus on next that this page may need
* brainstorming with the "AI program" of their choice regarding what to contribute next
* ask "AI program" for advice on how to contribute video notes in a [[Wikiversity:Research ethics]]-way and a "Do no harm"/"Primum non nocere" way.
== Original Intent ==
The intent for this page is for it to be used to develop a 'method' for working with "materials" like video interviews of famous people or video interviews/content of volunteers who sign up for [[Draft:The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea]].
== Contributor/Student Questions ==
If a contributor doesn't feel to edit this page directly but the contributor/student wants to ask a question to encourage development or they have any other question, this section is for that. '''Remember: No question is stupid!'''
== Beginning work - Video notes adhering to "Do no harm"/"Primum non nocere" ==
This is the section for main content for this page which is video notes. The way one makes video notes on this page may set the example for the method that will be developed in the future.
Goal is to treat famous people like any other people: like human beings. How one expresses oneself is very important and the original creator of this page may not be the best in that area, thus '''feel free to be bold and edit this page'''.
The start is usually the hardest and based on the idea name one can focus on any famous person related to the words
* draft
* neurodiversity
* inspiration
* idea
This is how this start is made. This idea may be lacking but one starts making mistakes, then later we learn how to do it better and then we fix those mistakes.
== Choosing video material ==
Video notes can wait. Let's focus first on choosing video material.
Why can video notes wait? The first task is choosing the video material and explaining why the specific material was chosen. It may not always be easy to take a decision and ie. ChatGPT or "AI Mode" can sometimes be used to make it easier to just choose something so one can focus on work and less on decisions. For some students/contributors that may be helpful.
The video notes though may be done step by step, one chooses a video material, explains the reasoning behind it and then focuses on working on the video notes in a "Do no harm" manner.
* How to associate the first person we focus on regarding the word ''draft''? Using "AI Mode" by Google on April 22, 2026, as a way to make "decisions easier" this input helped this project moving forward(feedback/comments appreciated) with the first "choice":
** Taylor Swift[1]
* Tom Hanks[2]
Taylor Swift is associated with the word ''draft'' in that she has been open in videos about her music creation process.
That makes this project focus on Taylor Swift as 1st person being added regarding 'video notes'.
=== Responsibility in regards to choosing video material ===
In this section if you feel free like listing yourself feel free to. Adhering to "Do no harm" can be very challenging. Though we have to try our best to achieve this.
It may be good or even necessary to explain why a choice was made so that anyone joining this project can be sure that there was a 100% human judgement made when choosing a subject.
As this project deals with real human beings similar to how psychiatry deals with real human beings with ie. the Autism Spectrum, the Bipolar Spectrum and similar were chosen and worked on, it dealt with real people. Psychiatry though dealt/deal mainly with children and this project deals mainly with adults. Preferably adults whose brains have fully matured and who have lived a few years with a fully matured brain which may mean 29 years of age which may be a good minimum age for this project.
This is a section where a user who is a contributor would like to take responsibility for a choice:
* [[User:ThinkingScience]]. I hereby take responsibility for the following choices: Taylor Swift. Read on my user page more at [[User:ThinkingScience#T]] why I made this choice.
** [[User:ThinkingScience#Tom_Hanks]] 2nd person I chose.
* Example user choice 2
* Example user choice 3
* Example user choice 4
* Example user choice 5
=== People chosen ===
This section could be updated less. Duplicating data/information is not desirable.
Do no harm will be challenging but is a requirement. Video notes must be respectful and not harm the individual.
'''For that to be achieved if two or more individuals are compared they must not have been in a feud or in a conflict with each other'''.
'''If they weren't in a feud and they are in the future, the notes of the most recent version must be removed/modified regarding any comparisons of currently feuding individuals.'''
This must be done to ensure the "Do no harm" requirement is met for this project.
* Taylor Swift[1]
== How the Linking References System works ==
ie. [1], [2] etc.
This section may be superfluous once a better system has replaced this.
Purpose: teach the students/contributors how to link to a central place where human generated inputs are made and "AI-generated" outputs results are made.
When you see ie. a [1] that means that you can find that [1] input made by a human and output most probably made by a an "AI program" or Large Language Model here if you look hard enough. Otherwise please submit feedback for how the user experience was. Here's the page: [[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea/AI_Prompt_History_for_Questions#"Reference_Coding"]]
=== References/in-Wikiversity-Wikilinks ===
'''Most importantly''':
All in-Wikiversity references like ie. [1] can be found at [[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea/AI_Prompt_History_for_Questions#"Reference_Coding"]]
[2] Can be found at [[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea/AI_Prompt_History_for_Questions#Reference_3]]
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2809122
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Dekatriofovia
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/* Choosing video material */ Stephen Colbert may be chosen as 3rd choice, depending on circumstances in the very near future
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{{AI-generated}}
== What {{tl|AI-generated}} means on this page ==
It means that the content on this page may be generated in the future. This is merely to "future-proof" this page as it may be assumed it is inevitable that one day even the content might be auto-generated and this notice existing might help students/contributors to let them know that there is a current "influence" by "AI programs" on this page, if not by content at least by influencing decisions.
If any content is generated contributors are encouraged to edit this section and make the appropriate changes to let students know that there has been a change.
What it means for now is that the contributors to this page are encouraged to interact with an "AI"/LLM in regards to
* decision-making on what to focus on next that this page may need
* brainstorming with the "AI program" of their choice regarding what to contribute next
* ask "AI program" for advice on how to contribute video notes in a [[Wikiversity:Research ethics]]-way and a "Do no harm"/"Primum non nocere" way.
== Original Intent ==
The intent for this page is for it to be used to develop a 'method' for working with "materials" like video interviews of famous people or video interviews/content of volunteers who sign up for [[Draft:The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea]].
== Contributor/Student Questions ==
If a contributor doesn't feel to edit this page directly but the contributor/student wants to ask a question to encourage development or they have any other question, this section is for that. '''Remember: No question is stupid!'''
== Beginning work - Video notes adhering to "Do no harm"/"Primum non nocere" ==
This is the section for main content for this page which is video notes. The way one makes video notes on this page may set the example for the method that will be developed in the future.
Goal is to treat famous people like any other people: like human beings. How one expresses oneself is very important and the original creator of this page may not be the best in that area, thus '''feel free to be bold and edit this page'''.
The start is usually the hardest and based on the idea name one can focus on any famous person related to the words
* draft
* neurodiversity
* inspiration
* idea
This is how this start is made. This idea may be lacking but one starts making mistakes, then later we learn how to do it better and then we fix those mistakes.
== Choosing video material ==
Video notes can wait. Let's focus first on choosing video material.
Why can video notes wait? The first task is choosing the video material and explaining why the specific material was chosen. It may not always be easy to take a decision and ie. ChatGPT or "AI Mode" can sometimes be used to make it easier to just choose something so one can focus on work and less on decisions. For some students/contributors that may be helpful.
The video notes though may be done step by step, one chooses a video material, explains the reasoning behind it and then focuses on working on the video notes in a "Do no harm" manner.
* How to associate the first person we focus on regarding the word ''draft''? Using "AI Mode" by Google on April 22, 2026, as a way to make "decisions easier" this input helped this project moving forward(feedback/comments appreciated) with the first "choice":
** Taylor Swift[1]
* Tom Hanks[2]
* Stephen Colbert(chosen based on inputting "tom hanks taylor swift" into YouTube and the 4th video(excluding "shorts") considered being potentially to be in good taste, but seeing video in progress...host of comedy show Stephen Colbert)
Taylor Swift is associated with the word ''draft'' in that she has been open in videos about her music creation process.
That makes this project focus on Taylor Swift as 1st person being added regarding 'video notes'.
=== Responsibility in regards to choosing video material ===
In this section if you feel free like listing yourself feel free to. Adhering to "Do no harm" can be very challenging. Though we have to try our best to achieve this.
It may be good or even necessary to explain why a choice was made so that anyone joining this project can be sure that there was a 100% human judgement made when choosing a subject.
As this project deals with real human beings similar to how psychiatry deals with real human beings with ie. the Autism Spectrum, the Bipolar Spectrum and similar were chosen and worked on, it dealt with real people. Psychiatry though dealt/deal mainly with children and this project deals mainly with adults. Preferably adults whose brains have fully matured and who have lived a few years with a fully matured brain which may mean 29 years of age which may be a good minimum age for this project.
This is a section where a user who is a contributor would like to take responsibility for a choice:
* [[User:ThinkingScience]]. I hereby take responsibility for the following choices: Taylor Swift. Read on my user page more at [[User:ThinkingScience#T]] why I made this choice.
** [[User:ThinkingScience#Tom_Hanks]] 2nd person I chose.
* Example user choice 2
* Example user choice 3
* Example user choice 4
* Example user choice 5
=== People chosen ===
This section could be updated less. Duplicating data/information is not desirable.
Do no harm will be challenging but is a requirement. Video notes must be respectful and not harm the individual.
'''For that to be achieved if two or more individuals are compared they must not have been in a feud or in a conflict with each other'''.
'''If they weren't in a feud and they are in the future, the notes of the most recent version must be removed/modified regarding any comparisons of currently feuding individuals.'''
This must be done to ensure the "Do no harm" requirement is met for this project.
* Taylor Swift[1]
== How the Linking References System works ==
ie. [1], [2] etc.
This section may be superfluous once a better system has replaced this.
Purpose: teach the students/contributors how to link to a central place where human generated inputs are made and "AI-generated" outputs results are made.
When you see ie. a [1] that means that you can find that [1] input made by a human and output most probably made by a an "AI program" or Large Language Model here if you look hard enough. Otherwise please submit feedback for how the user experience was. Here's the page: [[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea/AI_Prompt_History_for_Questions#"Reference_Coding"]]
=== References/in-Wikiversity-Wikilinks ===
'''Most importantly''':
All in-Wikiversity references like ie. [1] can be found at [[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea/AI_Prompt_History_for_Questions#"Reference_Coding"]]
[2] Can be found at [[Draft:The_Neurodiversity-inspired_Idea/AI_Prompt_History_for_Questions#Reference_3]]
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Template:Inactive curator
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Codename Noreste
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Grammar, rewriting a little.
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== Review of your curator permissions due to inactivity ==
Hello, valued Wikiversity contributor.
According to the [[Wikiversity:Curatorship#Notes|curatorship policy]], your account meets the inactivity criteria for curators (no edits and no logged actions for 2 years). A community notice about this review has been also posted at the [[Wikiversity:Colloquium|Colloquium]].
If you wish to resign your curator permissions, you can request their removal at [[Wikiversity:Request custodian action]].
If no response is received within one month, we will proceed with removing your curator permissions in accordance with the policy.
If you have any comments or questions, please share them on the Colloquium.
Thank you.<!-- Template:Inactive curator --><noinclude>
{{documentation}}
</noinclude>
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Category:Nominations for Bureaucratship
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[[Category:Wikiversity bureaucratship]]
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Athena problem
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/* Results */
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, write all [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s > ''b'' in the [[:w:Positional notation|positional notation]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' (the [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]]s are 0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1), and regard them as [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s (with [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of these strings under the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the elememt up to families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families. Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 known primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes (only count the numbers > ''b'') with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 18 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 6 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 minimal primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known minimal primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known minimal primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known minimal primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known minimal primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known minimal primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
7cmqveldx0xujzn36nqk6zr012e20og
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, write all [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s > ''b'' in the [[:w:Positional notation|positional notation]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' (the [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]]s are 0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1), and regard them as [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s (with [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of these strings under the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the elememt up to families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families. Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes (only count the numbers > ''b'') with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
hl64wgqd0243t2w95jlrk0ekpsw5629
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, write all [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s > ''b'' in the [[:w:Positional notation|positional notation]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' (the [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]]s are 0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1), and regard them as [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s (with [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of these strings under the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the elememt up to families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families. Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
nsnse55q9dxsgw6x6wsdpnwz15ggkc6
2808996
2808986
2026-05-14T00:14:52Z
雅典娜241
3071373
/* Results */
2808996
wikitext
text/x-wiki
'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, write all [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s > ''b'' in the [[:w:Positional notation|positional notation]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' (the [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]]s are 0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1), and regard them as [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s (with [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of these strings under the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families. Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
fhvym150df8dopq997kknc5dcyaw5x0
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, write all [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s > ''b'' in the [[:w:Positional notation|positional notation]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' (the [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]]s are 0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1), and regard them as [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s (with [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of these strings under the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
89130gkgloujym52uqpqhp9si9dcxe7
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2026-05-14T00:37:32Z
雅典娜241
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/* Results */
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, write all [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s > ''b'' in the [[:w:Positional notation|positional notation]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' (the [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]]s are 0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1), and regard them as [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s (with [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of these strings under the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
6hjgjvvlqwylfgzcisbqp3ishhkprxk
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雅典娜241
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, write all [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s > ''b'' in the [[:w:Positional notation|positional notation]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' (the [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]]s are 0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1), and regard them as [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s (with [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}), and find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of these strings under the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, Find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s) of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with wisdom). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, Find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s) of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
94hyiybzy7abava4ls90my2xgp6te5e
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, Find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s) of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s) of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]].
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''∅''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
mb37tsl36mf9n7yh2fbfecu1aw9121v
2809058
2809057
2026-05-14T03:44:55Z
雅典娜241
3071373
/* Results */
2809058
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty set|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
btso05weswn5bnvrioua0duupb7m5ca
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
9qv5d88oc1ncvlp0g495qiku1p9vyb2
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雅典娜241
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/* Results */
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 30 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
587jwikfbschlf5n7zqwb8bi0yft33k
2809062
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2026-05-14T03:49:16Z
雅典娜241
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/* Results */
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable:
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
6o0hwqjyhuzfd91fq56dxllujxtzksy
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雅典娜241
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/* Results */
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpinski number|Sierpinski problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
q6fmryhe85yocj45iea50w8f5374j2q
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2026-05-14T03:52:19Z
雅典娜241
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/* Results */
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text/x-wiki
'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which coprime to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
8gfyg6vik1ddtyg25orb3a49kxnd8fg
2809066
2809065
2026-05-14T03:53:13Z
雅典娜241
3071373
/* Results */
2809066
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''y'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}).
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using formal language theory, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' representations of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of").
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35, "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using formal language theory, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' representations of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of").
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using formal language theory, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' representations of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of").
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using formal language theory terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' representations of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of").
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using formal language theory terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of").
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using formal language theory terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, many of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite union of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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/* Results */
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
qgfg4n78ll7kfs8bo2ihyszdhyq7mmn
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雅典娜241
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/* Results */
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in base ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
[[Category:Number theory]]
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2809087
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2026-05-14T05:06:05Z
雅典娜241
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in base ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
== The fully proof of Athena problem in decimal (base ''b'' = 10) ==
'''bold''' for the minimal elements, ''x'' ◁ ''y'' means ''x'' is a subsequence of ''y''.
Assume ''p'' is a prime > 10, and the last digit of ''p'' must lie in {1,3,7,9}.
Case 1: ''p'' ends with 1.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''1. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 7, then (respectively) '''11''' ◁ ''p'', '''31''' ◁ ''p'', '''41''' ◁ ''p'', '''61''' ◁ ''p'', or '''71''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 8, or 9.
Case 1.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''1. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''251''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''281''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 29 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''2221''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 2''z''2''w''1, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''20201''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1 is '''22000001'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21 is '''20021'''.
Case 1.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''521''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 59 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 5, or 8.
If 05 ◁ ''y'', then '''5051''' ◁ ''p''. If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''5081''' ◁ ''p''. If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''5501''' ◁ ''p''. If 58 ◁ ''y'', then '''5581''' ◁ ''p''. If 80 ◁ ''y'', then '''5801''' ◁ ''p''. If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''5851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ {8}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 6, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' ∈ {5}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1 is '''555555555551'''.
If ''y'' ∈ {8}, since if 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',8}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {51,581}, but 51 and 581 are both composite.
Case 1.3: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write p = 8''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''821''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''881''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 89 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 5.
If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''8501''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0}{5}.
If 005 ◁ ''y'', then '''80051''' ◁ p. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ 0{5}.
If y ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 8{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ {5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 5, 55, 555, 5555, 55555, 555555, 5555555, 55555555, 555555555, 5555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {81, 851, 8551, 85551, 855551, 8555551, 85555551, 855555551, 8555555551, 85555555551, 855555555551}, but all of these numbers are composite.
If y ∈ 0{5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0, 05, 055, 0555, 05555, 055555, 0555555, 05555555, 055555555, 0555555555, 05555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {801, 8051, 80551, 805551, 8055551, 80555551, 805555551, 8055555551, 80555555551, 805555555551, 8055555555551}, and of these numbers only 80555551 and 8055555551 are primes, but 80555551 ◁ 8055555551, thus only '''80555551''' is minimal prime.
Case 1.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''1. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''991''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 2, 5, or 8.
If 00 ◁ ''y'', then '''9001''' ◁ ''p''. If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''9221''' ◁ ''p''. If 55 ◁ ''y'', then '''9551''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at most one 0, at most one 2, at most one 5, and at most one 8.
If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and does not contain any of {2,5,8}, then ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {91,901}, but 91 and 901 are both composite. If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and only one of {2,5,8}, then the sum of the digits of ''p'' is divisible by 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at least two of {2,5,8}.
If 25 ◁ ''y'', then 251 ◁ ''p''. If 28 ◁ ''y'', then 281 ◁ ''p''. If 52 ◁ ''y'', then 521 ◁ ''p''. If 82 ◁ ''y'', then 821 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains no 2's (since if ''y'' contains 2, then ''y'' cannot contain either 5's or 8's, which is a contradiction).
If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''9851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {58,580,508,058}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {9581,95801,95081,90581}, and of these numbers only 95801 is prime, but 95801 is not minimal prime since 5801 ◁ 95801.
Case 2: ''p'' ends with 3.
In this case we can write p = ''x''3. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''13''' ◁ ''p'', '''23''' ◁ ''p'', '''43''' ◁ ''p'', '''53''' ◁ ''p'', '''73''' ◁ ''p'', or '''83''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3: ''p'' ends with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''7. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 9, then (respectively) '''17''' ◁ ''p'', '''37''' ◁ ''p'', '''47''' ◁ ''p'', '''67''' ◁ ''p'', or '''97''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 7, or 8.
Case 3.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''227''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''257''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''277''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 8.
If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''2087''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 887 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ 8{0}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ 8{0}, then ''p'' ∈ 28{0}7. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 40<sub>''n''</sub>1 = 280<sub>''n''</sub>7.
Case 3.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''7. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''557''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''577''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''587''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then 227 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 12, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 5''z''2''w''7, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''50207''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7 is '''5200007'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27 is '''5000000000000000000000000000027'''.
Case 3.3: ''p'' begins with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 7''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''727''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''757''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''787''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 7, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0 or 7. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 7, ''p'' is divisible by 7, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3.4: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 8''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''827''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''857''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''877''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''887''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 8{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 15, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 4: ''p'' ends with 9.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''9. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''19''' ◁ ''p'', '''29''' ◁ ''p'', '''59''' ◁ ''p'', '''79''' ◁ ''p'', or '''89''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 4, 6, or 9.
If 44 ◁ ''x'', then '''449''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''x'' contains zero or one 4's.
If x contains no 4's, then all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume that ''x'' contains exactly one 4.
Case 4.1: ''p'' begins with 3.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 3''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. We must have '''349''' ◁ ''p''.
Case 4.2: ''p'' begins with 4.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 4''y''9, where all digits of ''y'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''409''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''499''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 4{6}9. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 6<sub>''n''</sub>7 = 46<sub>''n''</sub>9.
Case 4.3: ''p'' begins with 6.
In this case we can write p = 6''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''z'', then '''6469''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' is empty.
If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''6949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 6.
If 06 ◁ ''y'', then '''60649''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}{0}.
If 666 ◁ ''y'', then '''666649''' ◁ ''p''. If 00000 ◁ ''y'', then '''60000049''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 0, 00, 000, 0000, 6, 60, 600, 6000, 60000, 66, 660, 6600, 66000, 660000}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {649, 6049, 60049, 600049, 6000049, 6649, 66049, 660049, 6600049, 66000049, 66649, 666049, 6660049, 66600049, 666000049}, and of these numbers only '''66000049''' and '''66600049''' are primes.
Case 4.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''9049''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''y'', then '''9649''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''9949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' is empty.
If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9 is 946669.
[[Category:Number theory]]
9ut7s3wbfpvamzuvfajq3tyd3c66c4x
2809088
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雅典娜241
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/* The fully proof of Athena problem in decimal (base b = 10) */
2809088
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text/x-wiki
'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal prime since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the minimal primes in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in base ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
== The fully proof of Athena problem in decimal (base ''b'' = 10) ==
'''Bold''' for the minimal elements, ''x'' ◁ ''y'' means ''x'' is a subsequence of ''y''.
Assume ''p'' is a prime > 10, and the last digit of ''p'' must lie in {1,3,7,9}.
Case 1: ''p'' ends with 1.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''1. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 7, then (respectively) '''11''' ◁ ''p'', '''31''' ◁ ''p'', '''41''' ◁ ''p'', '''61''' ◁ ''p'', or '''71''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 8, or 9.
Case 1.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''1. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''251''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''281''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 29 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''2221''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 2''z''2''w''1, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''20201''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1 is '''22000001'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21 is '''20021'''.
Case 1.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''521''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 59 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 5, or 8.
If 05 ◁ ''y'', then '''5051''' ◁ ''p''. If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''5081''' ◁ ''p''. If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''5501''' ◁ ''p''. If 58 ◁ ''y'', then '''5581''' ◁ ''p''. If 80 ◁ ''y'', then '''5801''' ◁ ''p''. If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''5851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ {8}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 6, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' ∈ {5}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1 is '''555555555551'''.
If ''y'' ∈ {8}, since if 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',8}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {51,581}, but 51 and 581 are both composite.
Case 1.3: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write p = 8''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''821''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''881''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 89 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 5.
If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''8501''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0}{5}.
If 005 ◁ ''y'', then '''80051''' ◁ p. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ 0{5}.
If y ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 8{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ {5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 5, 55, 555, 5555, 55555, 555555, 5555555, 55555555, 555555555, 5555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {81, 851, 8551, 85551, 855551, 8555551, 85555551, 855555551, 8555555551, 85555555551, 855555555551}, but all of these numbers are composite.
If y ∈ 0{5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0, 05, 055, 0555, 05555, 055555, 0555555, 05555555, 055555555, 0555555555, 05555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {801, 8051, 80551, 805551, 8055551, 80555551, 805555551, 8055555551, 80555555551, 805555555551, 8055555555551}, and of these numbers only 80555551 and 8055555551 are primes, but 80555551 ◁ 8055555551, thus only '''80555551''' is minimal prime.
Case 1.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''1. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''991''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 2, 5, or 8.
If 00 ◁ ''y'', then '''9001''' ◁ ''p''. If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''9221''' ◁ ''p''. If 55 ◁ ''y'', then '''9551''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at most one 0, at most one 2, at most one 5, and at most one 8.
If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and does not contain any of {2,5,8}, then ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {91,901}, but 91 and 901 are both composite. If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and only one of {2,5,8}, then the sum of the digits of ''p'' is divisible by 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at least two of {2,5,8}.
If 25 ◁ ''y'', then 251 ◁ ''p''. If 28 ◁ ''y'', then 281 ◁ ''p''. If 52 ◁ ''y'', then 521 ◁ ''p''. If 82 ◁ ''y'', then 821 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains no 2's (since if ''y'' contains 2, then ''y'' cannot contain either 5's or 8's, which is a contradiction).
If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''9851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {58,580,508,058}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {9581,95801,95081,90581}, and of these numbers only 95801 is prime, but 95801 is not minimal prime since 5801 ◁ 95801.
Case 2: ''p'' ends with 3.
In this case we can write p = ''x''3. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''13''' ◁ ''p'', '''23''' ◁ ''p'', '''43''' ◁ ''p'', '''53''' ◁ ''p'', '''73''' ◁ ''p'', or '''83''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3: ''p'' ends with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''7. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 9, then (respectively) '''17''' ◁ ''p'', '''37''' ◁ ''p'', '''47''' ◁ ''p'', '''67''' ◁ ''p'', or '''97''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 7, or 8.
Case 3.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''227''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''257''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''277''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 8.
If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''2087''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 887 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ 8{0}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ 8{0}, then ''p'' ∈ 28{0}7. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 40<sub>''n''</sub>1 = 280<sub>''n''</sub>7.
Case 3.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''7. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''557''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''577''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''587''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then 227 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 12, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 5''z''2''w''7, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''50207''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7 is '''5200007'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27 is '''5000000000000000000000000000027'''.
Case 3.3: ''p'' begins with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 7''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''727''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''757''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''787''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 7, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0 or 7. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 7, ''p'' is divisible by 7, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3.4: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 8''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''827''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''857''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''877''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''887''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 8{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 15, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 4: ''p'' ends with 9.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''9. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''19''' ◁ ''p'', '''29''' ◁ ''p'', '''59''' ◁ ''p'', '''79''' ◁ ''p'', or '''89''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 4, 6, or 9.
If 44 ◁ ''x'', then '''449''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''x'' contains zero or one 4's.
If x contains no 4's, then all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume that ''x'' contains exactly one 4.
Case 4.1: ''p'' begins with 3.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 3''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. We must have '''349''' ◁ ''p''.
Case 4.2: ''p'' begins with 4.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 4''y''9, where all digits of ''y'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''409''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''499''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 4{6}9. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 6<sub>''n''</sub>7 = 46<sub>''n''</sub>9.
Case 4.3: ''p'' begins with 6.
In this case we can write p = 6''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''z'', then '''6469''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' is empty.
If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''6949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 6.
If 06 ◁ ''y'', then '''60649''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}{0}.
If 666 ◁ ''y'', then '''666649''' ◁ ''p''. If 00000 ◁ ''y'', then '''60000049''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 0, 00, 000, 0000, 6, 60, 600, 6000, 60000, 66, 660, 6600, 66000, 660000}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {649, 6049, 60049, 600049, 6000049, 6649, 66049, 660049, 6600049, 66000049, 66649, 666049, 6660049, 66600049, 666000049}, and of these numbers only '''66000049''' and '''66600049''' are primes.
Case 4.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''9049''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''y'', then '''9649''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''9949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' is empty.
If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9 is 946669.
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not minimal element since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the set of the minimal elements in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in base ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
== The fully proof of Athena problem in decimal (base ''b'' = 10) ==
'''Bold''' for the minimal elements, ''x'' ◁ ''y'' means ''x'' is a subsequence of ''y''.
Assume ''p'' is a prime > 10, and the last digit of ''p'' must lie in {1,3,7,9}.
Case 1: ''p'' ends with 1.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''1. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 7, then (respectively) '''11''' ◁ ''p'', '''31''' ◁ ''p'', '''41''' ◁ ''p'', '''61''' ◁ ''p'', or '''71''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 8, or 9.
Case 1.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''1. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''251''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''281''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 29 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''2221''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 2''z''2''w''1, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''20201''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1 is '''22000001'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21 is '''20021'''.
Case 1.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''521''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 59 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 5, or 8.
If 05 ◁ ''y'', then '''5051''' ◁ ''p''. If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''5081''' ◁ ''p''. If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''5501''' ◁ ''p''. If 58 ◁ ''y'', then '''5581''' ◁ ''p''. If 80 ◁ ''y'', then '''5801''' ◁ ''p''. If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''5851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ {8}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 6, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' ∈ {5}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1 is '''555555555551'''.
If ''y'' ∈ {8}, since if 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',8}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {51,581}, but 51 and 581 are both composite.
Case 1.3: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write p = 8''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''821''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''881''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 89 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 5.
If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''8501''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0}{5}.
If 005 ◁ ''y'', then '''80051''' ◁ p. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ 0{5}.
If y ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 8{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ {5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 5, 55, 555, 5555, 55555, 555555, 5555555, 55555555, 555555555, 5555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {81, 851, 8551, 85551, 855551, 8555551, 85555551, 855555551, 8555555551, 85555555551, 855555555551}, but all of these numbers are composite.
If y ∈ 0{5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0, 05, 055, 0555, 05555, 055555, 0555555, 05555555, 055555555, 0555555555, 05555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {801, 8051, 80551, 805551, 8055551, 80555551, 805555551, 8055555551, 80555555551, 805555555551, 8055555555551}, and of these numbers only 80555551 and 8055555551 are primes, but 80555551 ◁ 8055555551, thus only '''80555551''' is a minimal element.
Case 1.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''1. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''991''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 2, 5, or 8.
If 00 ◁ ''y'', then '''9001''' ◁ ''p''. If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''9221''' ◁ ''p''. If 55 ◁ ''y'', then '''9551''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at most one 0, at most one 2, at most one 5, and at most one 8.
If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and does not contain any of {2,5,8}, then ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {91,901}, but 91 and 901 are both composite. If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and only one of {2,5,8}, then the sum of the digits of ''p'' is divisible by 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at least two of {2,5,8}.
If 25 ◁ ''y'', then 251 ◁ ''p''. If 28 ◁ ''y'', then 281 ◁ ''p''. If 52 ◁ ''y'', then 521 ◁ ''p''. If 82 ◁ ''y'', then 821 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains no 2's (since if ''y'' contains 2, then ''y'' cannot contain either 5's or 8's, which is a contradiction).
If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''9851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {58,580,508,058}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {9581,95801,95081,90581}, and of these numbers only 95801 is prime, but 95801 is not a minimal element since 5801 ◁ 95801.
Case 2: ''p'' ends with 3.
In this case we can write p = ''x''3. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''13''' ◁ ''p'', '''23''' ◁ ''p'', '''43''' ◁ ''p'', '''53''' ◁ ''p'', '''73''' ◁ ''p'', or '''83''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3: ''p'' ends with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''7. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 9, then (respectively) '''17''' ◁ ''p'', '''37''' ◁ ''p'', '''47''' ◁ ''p'', '''67''' ◁ ''p'', or '''97''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 7, or 8.
Case 3.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''227''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''257''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''277''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 8.
If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''2087''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 887 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ 8{0}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ 8{0}, then ''p'' ∈ 28{0}7. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 40<sub>''n''</sub>1 = 280<sub>''n''</sub>7.
Case 3.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''7. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''557''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''577''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''587''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then 227 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 12, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 5''z''2''w''7, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''50207''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7 is '''5200007'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27 is '''5000000000000000000000000000027'''.
Case 3.3: ''p'' begins with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 7''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''727''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''757''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''787''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 7, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0 or 7. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 7, ''p'' is divisible by 7, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3.4: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 8''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''827''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''857''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''877''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''887''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 8{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 15, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 4: ''p'' ends with 9.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''9. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''19''' ◁ ''p'', '''29''' ◁ ''p'', '''59''' ◁ ''p'', '''79''' ◁ ''p'', or '''89''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 4, 6, or 9.
If 44 ◁ ''x'', then '''449''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''x'' contains zero or one 4's.
If x contains no 4's, then all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume that ''x'' contains exactly one 4.
Case 4.1: ''p'' begins with 3.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 3''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. We must have '''349''' ◁ ''p''.
Case 4.2: ''p'' begins with 4.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 4''y''9, where all digits of ''y'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''409''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''499''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 4{6}9. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 6<sub>''n''</sub>7 = 46<sub>''n''</sub>9.
Case 4.3: ''p'' begins with 6.
In this case we can write p = 6''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''z'', then '''6469''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' is empty.
If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''6949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 6.
If 06 ◁ ''y'', then '''60649''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}{0}.
If 666 ◁ ''y'', then '''666649''' ◁ ''p''. If 00000 ◁ ''y'', then '''60000049''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 0, 00, 000, 0000, 6, 60, 600, 6000, 60000, 66, 660, 6600, 66000, 660000}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {649, 6049, 60049, 600049, 6000049, 6649, 66049, 660049, 6600049, 66000049, 66649, 666049, 6660049, 66600049, 666000049}, and of these numbers only '''66000049''' and '''66600049''' are primes.
Case 4.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''9049''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''y'', then '''9649''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''9949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' is empty.
If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9 is 946669.
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not a minimal element since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the set of the minimal elements in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]]):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in base ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
== The fully proof of Athena problem in decimal (base ''b'' = 10) ==
'''Bold''' for the minimal elements, ''x'' ◁ ''y'' means ''x'' is a subsequence of ''y''.
Assume ''p'' is a prime > 10, and the last digit of ''p'' must lie in {1,3,7,9}.
Case 1: ''p'' ends with 1.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''1. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 7, then (respectively) '''11''' ◁ ''p'', '''31''' ◁ ''p'', '''41''' ◁ ''p'', '''61''' ◁ ''p'', or '''71''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 8, or 9.
Case 1.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''1. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''251''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''281''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 29 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''2221''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 2''z''2''w''1, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''20201''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1 is '''22000001'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21 is '''20021'''.
Case 1.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''521''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 59 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 5, or 8.
If 05 ◁ ''y'', then '''5051''' ◁ ''p''. If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''5081''' ◁ ''p''. If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''5501''' ◁ ''p''. If 58 ◁ ''y'', then '''5581''' ◁ ''p''. If 80 ◁ ''y'', then '''5801''' ◁ ''p''. If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''5851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ {8}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 6, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' ∈ {5}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1 is '''555555555551'''.
If ''y'' ∈ {8}, since if 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',8}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {51,581}, but 51 and 581 are both composite.
Case 1.3: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write p = 8''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''821''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''881''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 89 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 5.
If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''8501''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0}{5}.
If 005 ◁ ''y'', then '''80051''' ◁ p. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ 0{5}.
If y ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 8{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ {5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 5, 55, 555, 5555, 55555, 555555, 5555555, 55555555, 555555555, 5555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {81, 851, 8551, 85551, 855551, 8555551, 85555551, 855555551, 8555555551, 85555555551, 855555555551}, but all of these numbers are composite.
If y ∈ 0{5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0, 05, 055, 0555, 05555, 055555, 0555555, 05555555, 055555555, 0555555555, 05555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {801, 8051, 80551, 805551, 8055551, 80555551, 805555551, 8055555551, 80555555551, 805555555551, 8055555555551}, and of these numbers only 80555551 and 8055555551 are primes, but 80555551 ◁ 8055555551, thus only '''80555551''' is a minimal element.
Case 1.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''1. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''991''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 2, 5, or 8.
If 00 ◁ ''y'', then '''9001''' ◁ ''p''. If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''9221''' ◁ ''p''. If 55 ◁ ''y'', then '''9551''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at most one 0, at most one 2, at most one 5, and at most one 8.
If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and does not contain any of {2,5,8}, then ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {91,901}, but 91 and 901 are both composite. If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and only one of {2,5,8}, then the sum of the digits of ''p'' is divisible by 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at least two of {2,5,8}.
If 25 ◁ ''y'', then 251 ◁ ''p''. If 28 ◁ ''y'', then 281 ◁ ''p''. If 52 ◁ ''y'', then 521 ◁ ''p''. If 82 ◁ ''y'', then 821 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains no 2's (since if ''y'' contains 2, then ''y'' cannot contain either 5's or 8's, which is a contradiction).
If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''9851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {58,580,508,058}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {9581,95801,95081,90581}, and of these numbers only 95801 is prime, but 95801 is not a minimal element since 5801 ◁ 95801.
Case 2: ''p'' ends with 3.
In this case we can write p = ''x''3. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''13''' ◁ ''p'', '''23''' ◁ ''p'', '''43''' ◁ ''p'', '''53''' ◁ ''p'', '''73''' ◁ ''p'', or '''83''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3: ''p'' ends with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''7. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 9, then (respectively) '''17''' ◁ ''p'', '''37''' ◁ ''p'', '''47''' ◁ ''p'', '''67''' ◁ ''p'', or '''97''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 7, or 8.
Case 3.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''227''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''257''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''277''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 8.
If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''2087''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 887 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ 8{0}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ 8{0}, then ''p'' ∈ 28{0}7. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 40<sub>''n''</sub>1 = 280<sub>''n''</sub>7.
Case 3.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''7. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''557''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''577''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''587''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then 227 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 12, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 5''z''2''w''7, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''50207''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7 is '''5200007'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27 is '''5000000000000000000000000000027'''.
Case 3.3: ''p'' begins with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 7''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''727''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''757''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''787''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 7, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0 or 7. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 7, ''p'' is divisible by 7, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3.4: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 8''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''827''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''857''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''877''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''887''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 8{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 15, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 4: ''p'' ends with 9.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''9. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''19''' ◁ ''p'', '''29''' ◁ ''p'', '''59''' ◁ ''p'', '''79''' ◁ ''p'', or '''89''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 4, 6, or 9.
If 44 ◁ ''x'', then '''449''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''x'' contains zero or one 4's.
If x contains no 4's, then all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume that ''x'' contains exactly one 4.
Case 4.1: ''p'' begins with 3.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 3''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. We must have '''349''' ◁ ''p''.
Case 4.2: ''p'' begins with 4.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 4''y''9, where all digits of ''y'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''409''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''499''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 4{6}9. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 6<sub>''n''</sub>7 = 46<sub>''n''</sub>9.
Case 4.3: ''p'' begins with 6.
In this case we can write p = 6''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''z'', then '''6469''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' is empty.
If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''6949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 6.
If 06 ◁ ''y'', then '''60649''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}{0}.
If 666 ◁ ''y'', then '''666649''' ◁ ''p''. If 00000 ◁ ''y'', then '''60000049''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 0, 00, 000, 0000, 6, 60, 600, 6000, 60000, 66, 660, 6600, 66000, 660000}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {649, 6049, 60049, 600049, 6000049, 6649, 66049, 660049, 6600049, 66000049, 66649, 666049, 6660049, 66600049, 666000049}, and of these numbers only '''66000049''' and '''66600049''' are primes.
Case 4.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''9049''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''y'', then '''9649''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''9949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' is empty.
If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9 is 946669.
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not a minimal element since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the set of the minimal elements in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]], Sierpiński problem and Riesel problem can be generalized to other bases ''b''):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not start with the digit 0, ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in base ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
== The fully proof of Athena problem in decimal (base ''b'' = 10) ==
'''Bold''' for the minimal elements, ''x'' ◁ ''y'' means ''x'' is a subsequence of ''y''.
Assume ''p'' is a prime > 10, and the last digit of ''p'' must lie in {1,3,7,9}.
Case 1: ''p'' ends with 1.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''1. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 7, then (respectively) '''11''' ◁ ''p'', '''31''' ◁ ''p'', '''41''' ◁ ''p'', '''61''' ◁ ''p'', or '''71''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 8, or 9.
Case 1.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''1. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''251''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''281''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 29 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''2221''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 2''z''2''w''1, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''20201''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1 is '''22000001'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21 is '''20021'''.
Case 1.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''521''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 59 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 5, or 8.
If 05 ◁ ''y'', then '''5051''' ◁ ''p''. If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''5081''' ◁ ''p''. If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''5501''' ◁ ''p''. If 58 ◁ ''y'', then '''5581''' ◁ ''p''. If 80 ◁ ''y'', then '''5801''' ◁ ''p''. If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''5851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ {8}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 6, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' ∈ {5}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1 is '''555555555551'''.
If ''y'' ∈ {8}, since if 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',8}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {51,581}, but 51 and 581 are both composite.
Case 1.3: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write p = 8''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''821''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''881''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 89 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 5.
If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''8501''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0}{5}.
If 005 ◁ ''y'', then '''80051''' ◁ p. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ 0{5}.
If y ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 8{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ {5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 5, 55, 555, 5555, 55555, 555555, 5555555, 55555555, 555555555, 5555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {81, 851, 8551, 85551, 855551, 8555551, 85555551, 855555551, 8555555551, 85555555551, 855555555551}, but all of these numbers are composite.
If y ∈ 0{5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0, 05, 055, 0555, 05555, 055555, 0555555, 05555555, 055555555, 0555555555, 05555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {801, 8051, 80551, 805551, 8055551, 80555551, 805555551, 8055555551, 80555555551, 805555555551, 8055555555551}, and of these numbers only 80555551 and 8055555551 are primes, but 80555551 ◁ 8055555551, thus only '''80555551''' is a minimal element.
Case 1.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''1. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''991''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 2, 5, or 8.
If 00 ◁ ''y'', then '''9001''' ◁ ''p''. If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''9221''' ◁ ''p''. If 55 ◁ ''y'', then '''9551''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at most one 0, at most one 2, at most one 5, and at most one 8.
If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and does not contain any of {2,5,8}, then ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {91,901}, but 91 and 901 are both composite. If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and only one of {2,5,8}, then the sum of the digits of ''p'' is divisible by 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at least two of {2,5,8}.
If 25 ◁ ''y'', then 251 ◁ ''p''. If 28 ◁ ''y'', then 281 ◁ ''p''. If 52 ◁ ''y'', then 521 ◁ ''p''. If 82 ◁ ''y'', then 821 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains no 2's (since if ''y'' contains 2, then ''y'' cannot contain either 5's or 8's, which is a contradiction).
If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''9851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {58,580,508,058}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {9581,95801,95081,90581}, and of these numbers only 95801 is prime, but 95801 is not a minimal element since 5801 ◁ 95801.
Case 2: ''p'' ends with 3.
In this case we can write p = ''x''3. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''13''' ◁ ''p'', '''23''' ◁ ''p'', '''43''' ◁ ''p'', '''53''' ◁ ''p'', '''73''' ◁ ''p'', or '''83''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3: ''p'' ends with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''7. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 9, then (respectively) '''17''' ◁ ''p'', '''37''' ◁ ''p'', '''47''' ◁ ''p'', '''67''' ◁ ''p'', or '''97''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 7, or 8.
Case 3.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''227''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''257''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''277''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 8.
If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''2087''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 887 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ 8{0}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ 8{0}, then ''p'' ∈ 28{0}7. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 40<sub>''n''</sub>1 = 280<sub>''n''</sub>7.
Case 3.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''7. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''557''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''577''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''587''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then 227 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 12, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 5''z''2''w''7, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''50207''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7 is '''5200007'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27 is '''5000000000000000000000000000027'''.
Case 3.3: ''p'' begins with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 7''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''727''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''757''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''787''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 7, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0 or 7. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 7, ''p'' is divisible by 7, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3.4: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 8''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''827''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''857''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''877''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''887''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 8{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 15, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 4: ''p'' ends with 9.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''9. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''19''' ◁ ''p'', '''29''' ◁ ''p'', '''59''' ◁ ''p'', '''79''' ◁ ''p'', or '''89''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 4, 6, or 9.
If 44 ◁ ''x'', then '''449''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''x'' contains zero or one 4's.
If x contains no 4's, then all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume that ''x'' contains exactly one 4.
Case 4.1: ''p'' begins with 3.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 3''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. We must have '''349''' ◁ ''p''.
Case 4.2: ''p'' begins with 4.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 4''y''9, where all digits of ''y'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''409''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''499''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 4{6}9. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 6<sub>''n''</sub>7 = 46<sub>''n''</sub>9.
Case 4.3: ''p'' begins with 6.
In this case we can write p = 6''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''z'', then '''6469''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' is empty.
If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''6949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 6.
If 06 ◁ ''y'', then '''60649''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}{0}.
If 666 ◁ ''y'', then '''666649''' ◁ ''p''. If 00000 ◁ ''y'', then '''60000049''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 0, 00, 000, 0000, 6, 60, 600, 6000, 60000, 66, 660, 6600, 66000, 660000}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {649, 6049, 60049, 600049, 6000049, 6649, 66049, 660049, 6600049, 66000049, 66649, 666049, 6660049, 66600049, 666000049}, and of these numbers only '''66000049''' and '''66600049''' are primes.
Case 4.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''9049''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''y'', then '''9649''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''9949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' is empty.
If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9 is 946669.
[[Category:Number theory]]
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'''Athena problem''' is an [[:w:List of unsolved problems in mathematics|unsolved problem]] in [[:w:Number theory|number theory]] and [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] and [[:w:Order theory|order theory]], this problem is named after the ancient Greek goddess [[:w:Athena|Athena]] (which is associated with [[:w:Wisdom|wisdom]]). Athena problem is: Give a [[:w:Natural number|natural number]] ''b'' > 1, find the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the set of the "[[:w:Prime number|prime number]] [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b''" [[:w:Numerical digit|digit]] [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s in the [[:w:Positional numeral system|positional numeral system]] with [[:w:Radix|base]] ''b'' for the [[:w:Subsequence|subsequence]] [[:w:Partially ordered set|ordering]]. (A string ''x'' is a subsequence of another string ''y'', if ''x'' can be obtained from ''y'' by deleting zero or more of the [[:w:Character (computing)|character]]s in ''y''. For example, 514 is a subsequence of 352148, "string" is a subsequence of "meistersinger". In contrast, 758 is not a subsequence of 378259, "abc" is not a subsequence of "cbacacba", since the characters must be in the same order)
Using [[:w:Formal language theory|formal language theory]] terminology, Athena problem is finding the [[:w:Set (mathematics)|set]] of the [[:w:Minimal element|minimal element]]s of the [[:w:Formal language|language]] of base-''b'' [[:w:Representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of the [[:w:Prime number|prime number]]s [[:w:Greater than|>]] ''b'' (which is a set of [[:w:String (computer science)|string]]s of [[:w:Symbol|symbol]]s over the [[:w:Alphabet (formal languages)|alphabet]] ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> := {0, 1, ..., ''b''−1}), under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), for a given natural number ''b'' > 1.
By [[:w:Higman's lemma|Higman's lemma]], there are no [[:w:Infinite set|infinite]] [[:w:Antichain|antichain]]s for the subsequence ordering (i.e. the subsequence ordering is always a [[:w:Well-quasi-ordering|well quasi order]]) (i.e. under the subsequence ordering (i.e. the [[:w:Binary relation|binary relation]] "is a subsequence of"), every set of pairwise incomparable (i.e. not [[:w:Comparability|comparable]]) strings is finite), thus there must be only finitely many such minimal elements. In other words, the set of such minimal elements must be a [[:w:Finite set|finite set]], e.g. in [[:w:Decimal|decimal]] (base ''b'' = 10), this set has exactly 77 elements: {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}.
For bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36, Athena problem is fully solved in bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 24, and also solved in bases ''b'' = 11, 13, 16, 22, 30 if [[:w:Probable prime|probable prime]]s are allowed. For the unsolved bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, Athena problem is solved (if probable primes are allowed) except 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
== Results ==
These are the results of the Athena problem in bases 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36: (some large primes are only probable primes, i.e. not definitely primes, since they are too large to be [[:w:Elliptic curve primality|ECPP proved]] and [[:w:Pocklington primality test#Extensions and variants|neither ''N''−1 nor ''N''+1 can be ≥ 1/3 factored]], all of them pass the [[:w:Baillie–PSW primality test|Baillie–PSW primality test]] and the [[:w:Strong pseudoprime|strong primality test]] (i.e. the [[:w:Miller–Rabin primality test|Miller–Rabin primality test]]) with all prime bases ''p'' ≤ 61, however, all primes < 10<sup>25000</sup> for bases ''b'' = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 36 are definitely primes, most of them > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ECPP proving, others > 10<sup>299</sup> are proven primes with ''N''−1 or ''N''+1 proving)
To solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', we must [[:w:Computing|compute]] the element up to families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'') (we call such families ''linear families''), and find the smallest prime > ''b'' in all such families.
Shrinking the family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'')
* If ''y'' ∈ ''Y'' and the string ''xyyz'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''y''{''Y'' \ ''y''}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and the string ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or has a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
* If ''y''<sub>1</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>2</sub> ∈ ''Y'' and ''y''<sub>1</sub> ≠ ''y''<sub>2</sub> and both the strings ''xy''<sub>1</sub>''y''<sub>2</sub>''z'' and ''xy''<sub>2</sub>''y''<sub>1</sub>''z'' represent a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'' (in this case, add this prime to the list) or have a subsequence which represents a prime > ''b'' in base ''b'', then ''x''{''Y''}''z'' can be replaced with ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>1</sub>}''z'' ∪ ''x''{''Y'' \ ''y''<sub>2</sub>}''z''.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* 2221 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,2}1 splits into the two families 2{0}1 and 2{0}2{0}1.
* 227 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 5227, thus the family 5{0,2}7 splits into the two families 5{0}7 and 5{0}2{0}7.
* 449 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 6449, thus the family 6{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 6{0,3,6,9}9 and 6{0,3,6,9}4{0,3,6,9}9.
* Both 5051 and 5501 are primes > 10, thus the family 5{0,5}1 splits into the two families 5{0}1 and 5{5}1 = {5}1.
* 8501 is a prime > 10, thus the family 8{0,5}1 splits into the family 8{0}{5}1.
* 887 is a prime > 10, and it is a subsequence of 2887, also 2087 is a prime > 10, thus the family 2{0,8}7 splits into the two families 2{0}7 and 28{0}7.
* 349 and 449 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9349 and 9449, respectively, also 9049, 9649, 9949 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,3,4,6,9}9 splits into the two families 9{0,3,6,9}9 and 94{0,3,6,9}9.
* 251, 281, 521, 821, 881 are primes > 10, and they are subsequences of 9251, 9281, 9521, 9821, 9881, respectively, also 9001, 9221, 9551, 9851 are primes > 10, thus the family 9{0,2,5,8}1 splits into the numbers {91, 901, 921, 951, 981, 9021, 9051, 9081, 9201, 9501, 9581, 9801, 90581, 95081, 95801}.
If the methods we have discussed cannot be used to rule out or shrink ''x''{''Y''}''z'' where ''Y'' = {''y''<sub>1</sub>, ''y''<sub>2</sub>, ..., ''y''<sub>''n''</sub>}, then we can replace ''x''{''Y''}''z'' by ''xy''<sub>1</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ''xy''<sub>2</sub>{''Y''}''z'' ∪ ... ∪ ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>{''Y''}''z'' and re-run the methods on this new language.
If all remain families are linear families (i.e. of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b''), then we search the smallest (probable) primes in these families and add these primes to the list.
e.g. in decimal (base ''b'' = 10):
* The smallest prime in the family 5{0}27 is 5000000000000000000000000000027.
* The smallest prime in the family {5}1 is 555555555551.
* The smallest prime in the family 8{5}1 is 8555555555555555555551, but 8555555555555555555551 is not a minimal element since 555555555551 is a subsequence of 8555555555555555555551.
There is no guarantee that the techniques discussed will ever terminate, but in practice they often do. They are able to determine the set of the minimal elements in base ''b'' for 2 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 16 and ''b'' = 18, 20, 22, 24, 30. The bases ''b'' = 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 29, 31 ≤ ''b'' ≤ 36 are solved with the exception of 771 families of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''y'' is a digit in base ''b'').
The following is a "[[:w:Semi-algorithm|semi-algorithm]]" that is guaranteed to solve the Athena problem for a given base ''b'', but it is not so easy to implement:
# ''M'' = ''[[:w:Empty string|∅]]''
# while (''L'' ≠ ''∅'') do
# choose ''x'', a shortest string in ''L''
# ''M'' := ''M'' ∪ {''x''}
# ''L'' := ''L'' − ''sup''({''x''})
In practice, for arbitrary ''L'', we cannot feasibly carry out step 5. Instead, we work with ''L''', some regular overapproximation to ''L'', until we can show ''L''' = ''∅'' (which implies ''L'' = ''∅''). In practice, ''L''' is usually chosen to be a finite [[:w:Union (set theory)|union]] of sets of the form ''L''<sub>1</sub>{''L''<sub>2</sub>}''L''<sub>3</sub>, where each of ''L''<sub>1</sub>, ''L''<sub>2</sub>, ''L''<sub>3</sub> is finite. In the case we consider in this project, we then have to determine whether such a family contains a prime or not.
To solve the Athena problem, we need to determine whether a given family contains a prime. In practice, if family ''x''{''Y''}''z'' (where ''x'' and ''z'' are strings (may be empty) of digits in base ''b'', ''Y'' is a set of digits in base ''b'') could not be ruled out as only containing composites and ''Y'' contains two or more digits, then a relatively small prime > ''b'' could always be found in this family. Intuitively, this is because there are a large number of small strings in such a family, and at least one is likely to be prime (e.g. there are 2<sup>''n''−2</sup> strings of length ''n'' in the family 1{3,7}9, and there are over a thousand strings of length 12 in the family 1{3,7}9, thus it is very impossible that these numbers are all composite). In the case ''Y'' contains only one digit, this family is of the form ''x''{''y''}''z'', and there is only a single string of each length > (the length of ''x'' + the length of ''z''), and it is not known if the following [[:w:Decision problem|decision problem]] is recursively solvable (just like [[:w:Sierpiński number|Sierpiński problem]] and [[:w:Riesel number|Riesel problem]], Sierpiński problem and Riesel problem can be generalized to other bases ''b''):
Problem: Given strings ''x'', ''z'' (may be empty), a digit ''y'', and a base ''b'' (''x'' does not [[:w:Leading zero|start with the digit 0]], ''z'' ends with a digit which [[:w:Coprime integers|coprime]] to ''b'', ''y'' is not 0 if ''x'' is empty, ''y'' is coprime to ''b'' if ''z'' is empty), does there exist a prime number whose base-''b'' expansion is of the form ''xy''<sub>''n''</sub>''z'' for some ''n'' ≥ 0?
Some families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' by [[:w:Covering set|covering congruence]], [[:w:Factorization of polynomials|algebraic factorization]] (e.g. [[:w:Difference of two squares|difference of two squares]], [[:w:Sum of two cubes|sum of two cubes]], [[:w:Sophie Germain's identity|Sophie Germain's identity of ''x''<sup>4</sup>+4×''y''<sup>4</sup>]]), or combine of them, e.g.
* The base 9 family 2{7}: Always divisible by 2 or 5
* The base 16 family {8}F: Always divisible by 3, 7, or 13
* The base 21 family {7}D: Always divisible by 2, 13, or 17
* The base 23 family {D}GA: Always divisible by 2, 5, 7, 37, or 79
* The base 9 family 3{8}: Can be written as 4×9<sup>''n''</sup>−1 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−1) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 8 family 1{0}1: Can be written as 8<sup>''n''</sup>+1 and can be factored as (2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (4<sup>''n''</sup>−2<sup>''n''</sup>+1)
* The base 16 family {4}1: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>−49)/15 and can be factored as (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>−7) × (2×3<sup>''n''</sup>+7) / 15
* The base 16 family {C}D: Can be written as (4×16<sup>''n''</sup>+1)/5 and can be factored as (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>−2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) × (2×4<sup>''n''</sup>+2×2<sup>''n''</sup>+1) / 5
* The base 14 family 8{D}: Can be written as 9×14<sup>''n''</sup>−1, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (3×14<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) if ''n'' is even
* The base 12 family {B}9B: Can be written as 12<sup>''n''</sup>−25, it is divisible by 13 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>−5) × (12<sup>''n''/2</sup>+5) if ''n'' is even
* The base 17 family 1{9}: Can be written as (25×17<sup>''n''</sup>−9)/16, it is divisible by 2 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>−3) × (5×17<sup>''n''/2</sup>+3) / 16 if ''n'' is even
* The base 19 family 1{6}: Can be written as (4×19<sup>''n''</sup>−1)/3, it is divisible by 5 if ''n'' is odd and can be factored as (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>−1) × (2×19<sup>''n''/2</sup>+1) / 3 if ''n'' is even
By the [[:w:Prime number theorem|prime number theorem]], the [[:w:Probability|chance]] that a [[:w:Random number|random]] ''n''-digit base ''b'' number is prime is [[:w:Asymptotic analysis|approximately]] 1/''n'' (more accurately, the chance is approximately 1/(''n''×''ln''(''b'')), where ''ln'' is the [[:w:Natural logarithm|natural logarithm]]). If one conjectures the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' behave similarly (i.e. the numbers ''x''{''d''}''y'' is a [[:w:Pseudorandomness|pseudorandom sequence]]) you would expect [[:w:Harmonic_series (mathematics)|1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... = ∞]] primes of the form ''x''{''d''}''y'' (of course, this does not always happen, since some ''x''{''d''}''y'' families can be ruled out to contain no prime > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them), but it is at least a reasonable conjecture in the absence of evidence to the contrary. Hence, the [[:w:Heuristic argument|heuristic argument]] suggests there are always infinitely many primes in family ''x''{''d''}''y'' (where ''x'' and ''y'' are strings with alphabet ''Σ''<sub>''b''</sub> = {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}, ''d'' is a base-''b'' digit (i.e. an element in {0, 1, 2, ..., ''b''−1}) if it cannot be ruled out to contain no prime or only contain finitely many primes, by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them. However, some families ''x''{''d''}''y'' could not be proven to contain no primes > ''b'' (by covering congruence, algebraic factorization, or combine of them) but no primes > ''b'' could be found in the family, even after searching through numbers with over 100000 digits, e.g. the smallest (probable) prime in the family A{3}A in base ''b'' = 13 is A3<sub>592197</sub>A, which written in decimal contains 659677 digits (it is only probable prime, i.e. not definitely prime).
All numbers are written in base ''b'', [[:w:Senary#Base 36 as senary compression|using A to Z to represent digit values 10 to 35]], "{}" means repeating, e.g. family 12{3}45 means the sequence {1245, 12345, 123345, 1233345, 12333345, 123333345, ...} (where the members are expressed as base ''b'' strings), subscripts are used to indicate repetitions of digits, e.g. 123<sub>4</sub>567 means 123333567 (all subscripts are written in decimal).
Base 2: 1 prime (the largest of which has 2 digits): {11}
Base 3: 3 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {12, 21, 111}
Base 4: 5 primes (the largest of which has 3 digits): {11, 13, 23, 31, 221}
Base 5: 22 primes (the largest of which has 96 digits): {12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 104, 111, 131, 133, 313, 401, 414, 3101, 10103, 14444, 30301, 33001, 33331, 44441, 300031, 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000013}
Base 6: 11 primes (the largest of which has 5 digits): {11, 15, 21, 25, 31, 35, 45, 51, 4401, 4441, 40041}
Base 7: 71 primes (the largest of which has 17 digits): {14, 16, 23, 25, 32, 41, 43, 52, 56, 61, 65, 113, 115, 131, 133, 155, 212, 221, 304, 313, 335, 344, 346, 364, 445, 515, 533, 535, 544, 551, 553, 1022, 1051, 1112, 1202, 1211, 1222, 2111, 3031, 3055, 3334, 3503, 3505, 3545, 4504, 4555, 5011, 5455, 5545, 5554, 6034, 6634, 11111, 11201, 30011, 30101, 31001, 31111, 33001, 33311, 35555, 40054, 100121, 150001, 300053, 351101, 531101, 1100021, 33333301, 5100000001, 33333333333333331}
Base 8: 75 primes (the largest of which has 221 digits): {13, 15, 21, 23, 27, 35, 37, 45, 51, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 107, 111, 117, 141, 147, 161, 177, 225, 255, 301, 343, 361, 401, 407, 417, 431, 433, 463, 467, 471, 631, 643, 661, 667, 701, 711, 717, 747, 767, 3331, 3411, 4043, 4443, 4611, 5205, 6007, 6101, 6441, 6477, 6707, 6777, 7461, 7641, 47777, 60171, 60411, 60741, 444641, 500025, 505525, 3344441, 4444477, 5500525, 5550525, 55555025, 444444441, 744444441, 77774444441, 7777777777771, 555555555555525, 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444447}
Base 9: 151 primes (the largest of which has 1161 digits): {12, 14, 18, 21, 25, 32, 34, 41, 45, 47, 52, 58, 65, 67, 74, 78, 81, 87, 117, 131, 135, 151, 155, 175, 177, 238, 272, 308, 315, 331, 337, 355, 371, 375, 377, 438, 504, 515, 517, 531, 537, 557, 564, 601, 638, 661, 702, 711, 722, 735, 737, 751, 755, 757, 771, 805, 838, 1011, 1015, 1101, 1701, 2027, 2207, 3017, 3057, 3101, 3501, 3561, 3611, 3688, 3868, 5035, 5051, 5071, 5101, 5501, 5554, 5705, 5707, 7017, 7075, 7105, 7301, 8535, 8544, 8555, 8854, 20777, 22227, 22777, 30161, 33388, 50161, 50611, 53335, 55111, 55535, 55551, 57061, 57775, 70631, 71007, 77207, 100037, 100071, 100761, 105007, 270707, 301111, 305111, 333035, 333385, 333835, 338885, 350007, 500075, 530005, 555611, 631111, 720707, 2770007, 3030335, 7776662, 30300005, 30333335, 38333335, 51116111, 70000361, 300030005, 300033305, 351111111, 1300000007, 5161111111, 8333333335, 300000000035, 311111111161, 544444444444, 2000000000007, 5700000000001, 7270000000007, 88888888833335, 100000000000507, 5111111111111161, 7277777777777777707, 8888888888888888888335, 30000000000000000000051, 1000000000000000000000000057, 56111111111111111111111111111111111111, 7666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666662, 27777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777707, 300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000011}
Base 10: 77 primes (the largest of which has 31 digits): {11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 227, 251, 257, 277, 281, 349, 409, 449, 499, 521, 557, 577, 587, 727, 757, 787, 821, 827, 857, 877, 881, 887, 991, 2087, 2221, 5051, 5081, 5501, 5581, 5801, 5851, 6469, 6949, 8501, 9001, 9049, 9221, 9551, 9649, 9851, 9949, 20021, 20201, 50207, 60649, 80051, 666649, 946669, 5200007, 22000001, 60000049, 66000049, 66600049, 80555551, 555555555551, 5000000000000000000000000000027}
Base 11: 1068 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: 57<sub>62668</sub>), the largest of which has 62669 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel11 Data of Athena problem base 11]
Base 12: 106 primes (the largest of which has 42 digits): {11, 15, 17, 1B, 25, 27, 31, 35, 37, 3B, 45, 4B, 51, 57, 5B, 61, 67, 6B, 75, 81, 85, 87, 8B, 91, 95, A7, AB, B5, B7, 221, 241, 2A1, 2B1, 2BB, 401, 421, 447, 471, 497, 565, 655, 665, 701, 70B, 721, 747, 771, 77B, 797, 7A1, 7BB, 907, 90B, 9BB, A41, B21, B2B, 2001, 200B, 202B, 222B, 229B, 292B, 299B, 4441, 4707, 4777, 6A05, 6AA5, 729B, 7441, 7B41, 929B, 9777, 992B, 9947, 997B, 9997, A0A1, A201, A605, A6A5, AA65, B001, B0B1, BB01, BB41, 600A5, 7999B, 9999B, AAAA1, B04A1, B0B9B, BAA01, BAAA1, BB09B, BBBB1, 44AAA1, A00065, BBBAA1, AAA0001, B00099B, AA000001, BBBBBB99B, B0000000000000000000000000009B, 400000000000000000000000000000000000000077}
Base 13: 3197 primes (including 4 unproven probable primes: C5<sub>23755</sub>C, 80<sub>32017</sub>111, 95<sub>197420</sub>, A3<sub>592197</sub>A), the largest of which has 592199 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel13 Data of Athena problem base 13]
Base 14: 650 primes, the largest of which has 19699 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel14 Data of Athena problem base 14]
Base 15: 1284 primes, the largest of which has 157 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel15 Data of Athena problem base 15]
Base 16: 2347 primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: DB<sub>32234</sub>, 4<sub>72785</sub>DD, 3<sub>116137</sub>AF), the largest of which has 116139 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel16 Data of Athena problem base 16]
Base 17: 10415 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 12 unsolved families (1{7}, 1F{0}7, 4{7}A, 70F{0}D, 8{B}9, 9{5}9, A{D}F, B{0}B3, {B}E9, {B}EE, F1{9}, FD0{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel17 Data of Athena problem base 17] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left17 Data of unsolved families for base 17]
Base 18: 549 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel18 Data of Athena problem base 18]
Base 19: 31417 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 17 unsolved families (4B5{0}H, {5}3, 5{H}05, 5{H}0H, 5{H}5, 66{B}, 71{0}177, 7AF{0}H, 97{0}3, C{H}C, EE1{6}, F{7}5, F{B}G, F{D}F, H0F{0}7A, HB{0}5B5, II{D}, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel19 Data of Athena problem base 19] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left19 Data of unsolved families for base 19]
Base 20: 3314 primes, the largest of which has 6271 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel20 Data of Athena problem base 20]
Base 21: 13386 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 8 unsolved families (5{0}DJ, {9}D, B3{0}EB, B{H}6H, C{F}0K, {F}35, G{0}FK, H{0}7771, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel21 Data of Athena problem base 21] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left21 Data of unsolved families for base 21]
Base 22: 8003 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: BK<sub>22001</sub>5), the largest of which has 22003 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel22 Data of Athena problem base 22]
Base 23: 65178 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 87 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel23 Data of Athena problem base 23] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left23 Data of unsolved families for base 23]
Base 24: 3409 primes, the largest of which has 8134 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel24 Data of Athena problem base 24]
Base 25: 133639 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 85 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel25 Data of Athena problem base 25] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left25 Data of unsolved families for base 25]
Base 26: 25256 known primes (including 7 unproven probable primes: 5<sub>19391</sub>6F, 7<sub>20279</sub>OL, LD0<sub>20975</sub>7, 6K<sub>23300</sub>5, J0<sub>44303</sub>KCB, M0<sub>61186</sub>2BB, 85M<sub>197060</sub>B) and 3 unsolved families ({A}6F, {H}MH, {I}GL, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel26 Data of Athena problem base 26]
Base 27: 102852 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 44 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel27 Data of Athena problem base 27] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left27 Data of unsolved families for base 27]
Base 28: 25528 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: N6<sub>24051</sub>LR, 5OA<sub>31238</sub>F, O4O<sub>94535</sub>9) and 1 unsolved family (O{A}F, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 709070, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel28 Data of Athena problem base 28]
Base 29: 355242 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 125 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel29 Data of Athena problem base 29] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left29 Data of unsolved families for base 29]
Base 30: 2619 primes (including 1 unproven probable prime: I0<sub>24608</sub>D), the largest of which has 34206 digits, see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel30 Data of Athena problem base 30]
Base 31: 569323 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 77 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel31 Data of Athena problem base 31] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left31 Data of unsolved families for base 31]
Base 32: 168882 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 120 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel32 Data of Athena problem base 32] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left32 Data of unsolved families for base 32]
Base 33: 280012 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 81 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel33 Data of Athena problem base 33] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left33 Data of unsolved families for base 33]
Base 34: 184785 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 47 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel34 Data of Athena problem base 34] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left34 Data of unsolved families for base 34]
Base 35: 720002 known primes (including many unproven probable primes) and 60 unsolved families (no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 100000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel35 Data of Athena problem base 35] and [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/left35 Data of unsolved families for base 35]
Base 36: 35286 known primes (including 3 unproven probable primes: 7K<sub>26567</sub>Z, S0<sub>75007</sub>8H, P<sub>81993</sub>SZ) and 4 unsolved families (B{0}EUV, HM{0}N, N{0}YYN, O{L}Z, no primes or probable primes with length ≤ 200000, nor can be proven to only contain composites), see [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xayahrainie4793/minimal-elements-of-the-prime-numbers/main/kernel36 Data of Athena problem base 36]
== The fully proof of Athena problem in decimal (base ''b'' = 10) ==
'''Bold''' for the minimal elements, ''x'' ◁ ''y'' means ''x'' is a subsequence of ''y''.
Assume ''p'' is a prime > 10, and the last digit of ''p'' must lie in {1,3,7,9}.
Case 1: ''p'' ends with 1.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''1. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 7, then (respectively) '''11''' ◁ ''p'', '''31''' ◁ ''p'', '''41''' ◁ ''p'', '''61''' ◁ ''p'', or '''71''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 8, or 9.
Case 1.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''1. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''251''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''281''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 29 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''2221''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 2''z''2''w''1, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''20201''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 22{0}1 is '''22000001'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 2{0}21 is '''20021'''.
Case 1.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''521''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 59 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 5, or 8.
If 05 ◁ ''y'', then '''5051''' ◁ ''p''. If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''5081''' ◁ ''p''. If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''5501''' ◁ ''p''. If 58 ◁ ''y'', then '''5581''' ◁ ''p''. If 80 ◁ ''y'', then '''5801''' ◁ ''p''. If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''5851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ {8}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 6, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' ∈ {5}, then ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{5}1 is '''555555555551'''.
If ''y'' ∈ {8}, since if 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',8}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {51,581}, but 51 and 581 are both composite.
Case 1.3: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write p = 8''y''1. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''821''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''881''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then 89 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 5.
If 50 ◁ ''y'', then '''8501''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0}{5}.
If 005 ◁ ''y'', then '''80051''' ◁ p. Hence we may assume y ∈ {0} ∪ {5} ∪ 0{5}.
If y ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 8{0}1. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ {5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 5, 55, 555, 5555, 55555, 555555, 5555555, 55555555, 555555555, 5555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {81, 851, 8551, 85551, 855551, 8555551, 85555551, 855555551, 8555555551, 85555555551, 855555555551}, but all of these numbers are composite.
If y ∈ 0{5}, since if 55555555555 ◁ ''y'', then 555555555551 ◁ ''p'', hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0, 05, 055, 0555, 05555, 055555, 0555555, 05555555, 055555555, 0555555555, 05555555555}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {801, 8051, 80551, 805551, 8055551, 80555551, 805555551, 8055555551, 80555555551, 805555555551, 8055555555551}, and of these numbers only 80555551 and 8055555551 are primes, but 80555551 ◁ 8055555551, thus only '''80555551''' is a minimal element.
Case 1.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''1. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''991''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0, 2, 5, or 8.
If 00 ◁ ''y'', then '''9001''' ◁ ''p''. If 22 ◁ ''y'', then '''9221''' ◁ ''p''. If 55 ◁ ''y'', then '''9551''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 881 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at most one 0, at most one 2, at most one 5, and at most one 8.
If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and does not contain any of {2,5,8}, then ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'',0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {91,901}, but 91 and 901 are both composite. If ''y'' only contains at most one 0 and only one of {2,5,8}, then the sum of the digits of ''p'' is divisible by 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains at least two of {2,5,8}.
If 25 ◁ ''y'', then 251 ◁ ''p''. If 28 ◁ ''y'', then 281 ◁ ''p''. If 52 ◁ ''y'', then 521 ◁ ''p''. If 82 ◁ ''y'', then 821 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains no 2's (since if ''y'' contains 2, then ''y'' cannot contain either 5's or 8's, which is a contradiction).
If 85 ◁ ''y'', then '''9851''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {58,580,508,058}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {9581,95801,95081,90581}, and of these numbers only 95801 is prime, but 95801 is not a minimal element since 5801 ◁ 95801.
Case 2: ''p'' ends with 3.
In this case we can write p = ''x''3. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''13''' ◁ ''p'', '''23''' ◁ ''p'', '''43''' ◁ ''p'', '''53''' ◁ ''p'', '''73''' ◁ ''p'', or '''83''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3: ''p'' ends with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''7. If ''x'' contains 1, 3, 4, 6, or 9, then (respectively) '''17''' ◁ ''p'', '''37''' ◁ ''p'', '''47''' ◁ ''p'', '''67''' ◁ ''p'', or '''97''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 2, 5, 7, or 8.
Case 3.1: ''p'' begins with 2.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 2''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''227''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''257''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''277''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 8.
If 08 ◁ ''y'', then '''2087''' ◁ ''p''. If 88 ◁ ''y'', then 887 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0} ∪ 8{0}.
If ''y'' ∈ {0}, then ''p'' ∈ 2{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 9, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If y ∈ 8{0}, then ''p'' ∈ 28{0}7. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 40<sub>''n''</sub>1 = 280<sub>''n''</sub>7.
Case 3.2: ''p'' begins with 5.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 5''y''7. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''557''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''577''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''587''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 2.
If 22 ◁ ''y'', then 227 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' contains zero or one 2's.
If ''y'' contains no 2's, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 12, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
If ''y'' contains exactly one 2, then we can write ''p'' = 5''z''2''w''7, where ''z'',''w'' ∈ {0}. If 0 ◁ ''z'' and 0 ◁ ''w'', then '''50207''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume either ''z'' or ''w'' is empty.
If ''z'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 52{0}7 is '''5200007'''.
If ''w'' is empty, then ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 5{0}27 is '''5000000000000000000000000000027'''.
Case 3.3: ''p'' begins with 7.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 7''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''727''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''757''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''787''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 7, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0 or 7. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 7, ''p'' is divisible by 7, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 3.4: ''p'' begins with 8.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 8''y''7. If 2 ◁ ''y'', then '''827''' ◁ ''p''. If 5 ◁ ''y'', then '''857''' ◁ ''p''. If 7 ◁ ''y'', then '''877''' ◁ ''p''. If 8 ◁ ''y'', then '''887''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {0}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 8{0}7. But then, since the sum of the digits of ''p'' is 15, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime.
Case 4: ''p'' ends with 9.
In this case we can write ''p'' = ''x''9. If ''x'' contains 1, 2, 5, 7, or 8, then (respectively) '''19''' ◁ ''p'', '''29''' ◁ ''p'', '''59''' ◁ ''p'', '''79''' ◁ ''p'', or '''89''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 4, 6, or 9.
If 44 ◁ ''x'', then '''449''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''x'' contains zero or one 4's.
If x contains no 4's, then all digits of ''x'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9, and thus all digits of ''p'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. But then, since the digits of ''p'' all have a common factor 3, ''p'' is divisible by 3, so ''p'' cannot be prime. Hence we may assume that ''x'' contains exactly one 4.
Case 4.1: ''p'' begins with 3.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 3''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. We must have '''349''' ◁ ''p''.
Case 4.2: ''p'' begins with 4.
In this case we can write ''p'' = 4''y''9, where all digits of ''y'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''409''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''499''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 4{6}9. But then ''p'' is divisible by 7, since for ''n'' ≥ 0 we have 7 × 6<sub>''n''</sub>7 = 46<sub>''n''</sub>9.
Case 4.3: ''p'' begins with 6.
In this case we can write p = 6''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''z'', then '''6469''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' is empty.
If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''6949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume all digits of ''y'' are 0 or 6.
If 06 ◁ ''y'', then '''60649''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {6}{0}.
If 666 ◁ ''y'', then '''666649''' ◁ ''p''. If 00000 ◁ ''y'', then '''60000049''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' ∈ {''𝜆'', 0, 00, 000, 0000, 6, 60, 600, 6000, 60000, 66, 660, 6600, 66000, 660000}, and thus ''p'' ∈ {649, 6049, 60049, 600049, 6000049, 6649, 66049, 660049, 6600049, 66000049, 66649, 666049, 6660049, 66600049, 666000049}, and of these numbers only '''66000049''' and '''66600049''' are primes.
Case 4.4: ''p'' begins with 9.
In this case we can write p = 9''y''4''z''9, where all digits of ''y'', ''z'' are 0, 3, 6, or 9. If 0 ◁ ''y'', then '''9049''' ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''y'', then 349 ◁ ''p''. If 6 ◁ ''y'', then '''9649''' ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''y'', then '''9949''' ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''y'' is empty.
If 0 ◁ ''z'', then 409 ◁ ''p''. If 3 ◁ ''z'', then 43 ◁ ''p''. If 9 ◁ ''z'', then 499 ◁ ''p''. Hence we may assume ''z'' ∈ {6}, and thus ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9, and the smallest prime ''p'' ∈ 94{6}9 is 946669.
[[Category:Number theory]]
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=== {{User|Koavf}} ===
Per the [https://en.wikiversity.org/w/index.php?title=Wikiversity:Request_custodian_action&oldid=2808455#Call_for_custodians_and_bureaucrats call] made by {{user|Jtneill}}, I am self-nominating for bureaucrat. I have had advanced user rights here for years and have been an bureaucrat on [[:oversight:]] and a CheckUser on [[:species:]], among other wikis where I am an admin/sysop. I would be happy to help here as needed. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 06:48, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
:Can you clarify what you mean with the [[oversight:]] red link? [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:21, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Comments ====
==== Voting ====
* {{support}} Prolific contributor to Wikimedia projects, with extensive and well-respected administrative experience and proven willingness to help English Wikiversity. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:41, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:26, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
[[Category:Nominations for Bureaucratship|Koavf]]
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* {{tl|Walsh permutation/sequences/A127944}}
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<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/>
{| class="wikitable sequences"
|-
!class="key"| 0
|class="val"|
|
|-
!class="key"| 1
|class="val"|
|
|-
!class="key"| 2
|class="val"|
|
|-
!class="key"| 3
|class="val"|
|
|-
!class="key"| 4
|class="val"|
|
|-
!class="key"| 5
|class="val"|
|
|-
!class="key"| 6
|class="val"|
|
|}
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
</syntaxhighlight>
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
</noinclude>
31h2ut5y9wvpdv7yfqy93iufsaarxae
Template:Walsh permutation/sequences/A002884
10
329567
2808923
2808658
2026-05-13T18:54:48Z
Watchduck
137431
2808923
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/>
{| class="wikitable sequences"
!class="key"| ''n''
!
!colspan="2" class="border"| {{oeis|A023758}}
!class="border"| {{oeis|A053601}}(''n'') · {{oeis|A000142}}(''n'')
|-
!class="key"| 0
|class="val"| 1
|class="border small"|
|
|class="border"| <span class="base">1</span> · <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 1
|class="val"| 1
|class="border small"| (2−1)
| 1
|class="border"| <span class="base">1</span> · <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 2
|class="val"| 6
|class="border small"| (4−2) · (4−1)
| 2 · 3
|class="border"| <span class="base">3</span> · <span class="fact">2</span>
|-
!class="key"| 3
|class="val"| 168
|class="border small"| (8−4) · (8−2) · (8−1)
| 4 · 6 · 7
|class="border"| <span class="base">28</span> · <span class="fact">6</span>
|-
!class="key"| 4
|class="val"| 20160
|class="border small"| (16−8) · (16−4) · (16−2) · (16−1)
| 8 · 12 · 14 · 15
|class="border"| <span class="base">840</span> · <span class="fact">24</span>
|-
!class="key"| 5
|class="val"| 9999360
|class="border small"| (32−16) · (32−8) · (32−4) · (32−2) · (32−1)
| 16 · 24 · 28 · 30 · 31
|class="border"| <span class="base">83328</span> · <span class="fact">120</span>
|-
!class="key"| 6
|class="val"| 20158709760
|class="border small"| (64−32) · (64−16) · (64−8) · (64−4) · (64−2) · (64−1)
| 32 · 48 · 56 · 60 · 62 · 63
|class="border"| <span class="base">27998208</span> · <span class="fact">720</span>
|}
fmjtdzmjytxl0f4rskpau15c35c9szx
2808924
2808923
2026-05-13T18:55:04Z
Watchduck
137431
2808924
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/>
{| class="wikitable sequences"
!class="key"| ''n''
! {{oeis|A002884}}(''n'')
!colspan="2" class="border"| {{oeis|A023758}}
!class="border"| {{oeis|A053601}}(''n'') · {{oeis|A000142}}(''n'')
|-
!class="key"| 0
|class="val"| 1
|class="border small"|
|
|class="border"| <span class="base">1</span> · <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 1
|class="val"| 1
|class="border small"| (2−1)
| 1
|class="border"| <span class="base">1</span> · <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 2
|class="val"| 6
|class="border small"| (4−2) · (4−1)
| 2 · 3
|class="border"| <span class="base">3</span> · <span class="fact">2</span>
|-
!class="key"| 3
|class="val"| 168
|class="border small"| (8−4) · (8−2) · (8−1)
| 4 · 6 · 7
|class="border"| <span class="base">28</span> · <span class="fact">6</span>
|-
!class="key"| 4
|class="val"| 20160
|class="border small"| (16−8) · (16−4) · (16−2) · (16−1)
| 8 · 12 · 14 · 15
|class="border"| <span class="base">840</span> · <span class="fact">24</span>
|-
!class="key"| 5
|class="val"| 9999360
|class="border small"| (32−16) · (32−8) · (32−4) · (32−2) · (32−1)
| 16 · 24 · 28 · 30 · 31
|class="border"| <span class="base">83328</span> · <span class="fact">120</span>
|-
!class="key"| 6
|class="val"| 20158709760
|class="border small"| (64−32) · (64−16) · (64−8) · (64−4) · (64−2) · (64−1)
| 32 · 48 · 56 · 60 · 62 · 63
|class="border"| <span class="base">27998208</span> · <span class="fact">720</span>
|}
awa1apb70694tbcnx91vw545tbrf9k9
2809106
2808924
2026-05-14T09:58:36Z
Watchduck
137431
2809106
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/>
{| class="wikitable sequences"
!class="key"| ''n''
! {{oeis|A002884}}(''n'')
!class="border"| {{oeis|A023758}}
!class="border"| {{oeis|A053601}}(''n'') · {{oeis|A000142}}(''n'')
|-
!class="key"| 0
|class="val"| 1
|class="border"|
|class="border"| <span class="base">1</span> · <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 1
|class="val"| 1
|class="border"| 1
|class="border"| <span class="base">1</span> · <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 2
|class="val"| 6
|class="border"| 2 · 3
|class="border"| <span class="base">3</span> · <span class="fact">2</span>
|-
!class="key"| 3
|class="val"| 168
|class="border"| 4 · 6 · 7
|class="border"| <span class="base">28</span> · <span class="fact">6</span>
|-
!class="key"| 4
|class="val"| 20160
|class="border"| 8 · 12 · 14 · 15
|class="border"| <span class="base">840</span> · <span class="fact">24</span>
|-
!class="key"| 5
|class="val"| 9999360
|class="border"| 16 · 24 · 28 · 30 · 31
|class="border"| <span class="base">83328</span> · <span class="fact">120</span>
|-
!class="key"| 6
|class="val"| 20158709760
|class="border"| 32 · 48 · 56 · 60 · 62 · 63
|class="border"| <span class="base">27998208</span> · <span class="fact">720</span>
|}
nfq4vyk16g5whpq0fcmw7cixoaxp5fs
Wikiversity:Candidates for Bureaucratship/Atcovi
4
329572
2808980
2808856
2026-05-13T23:24:17Z
PieWriter
3039865
/* Voting */
2808980
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|Atcovi}} ===
Hello to the Wikiversity community! I’m currently running for bureaucratship on the project. I’ve been part of the Wikiversity community since 2010 (at the age of 7, though not exactly sure I knew what I was doing back then…) and I’ve served as an administrator on the project since June 2021 (see my request from back then [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Atcovi5|here]]). I’ve also served as an English Wikibooks administrator since March 2015, a MediaWiki administrator since 2017, and held other roles previously on the Wikimedia Projects (including administrator rights on Meta Wiki and global sysopship).
I hope to continue my personal projects (see [[User:Atcovi/Works|this]] for some of these projects) and ensure that content on Wikiversity adheres to Wikiversity guidelines/policies. This includes removing/managing pseudoscientific content masquerading as established science, as well as other content that violates Wikiversity’s learning principles and guidelines.
I'm more than happy to take up additional responsibilities to better serve the community, and I hope my past experiences in trusted positions can demonstrate my ability to handle higher responsibilities.
Thanks! —[[User:Atcovi|Atcovi]] [[User talk:Atcovi|(Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Atcovi|Contribs)]] 14:19, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
==== Voting ====
*{{support}} Trusted and helpful user who has shown good judgement. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 15:02, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{support}} per the reasoning, Wikiversity could probably have more custodians and bureaucrats available. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 15:17, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{support}} A trusted contributor to Wikiversity, custodian here for ~5 years, admin experience/roles on other wiki projects without any notable issues. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:39, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:24, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
[[Category:Nominations for Bureaucratship|Atcovi]]
jamfhixnaucztji3434hmi75y1llg0f
Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/Codename Noreste
4
329574
2808875
2808778
2026-05-13T13:36:19Z
Ternera
2468111
/* Comments */ s
2808875
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|Codename Noreste}} ===
Hello, everyone. Per the [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats|call listed at WV:NOTICE]], I am running for custodianship. Here is what I plan to do with my new custodian abilities:
* Block vandals, spammers, and LTAs; on the other hand, I would unblock users if there are potential false positives from the abuse filter.
* Delete and view deleted content, and possibly restore if there is consensus.
* Manage abuse filters for maintenance and fixes.
* Modify the user interface for dark mode support (although I am running for interface administrator, that is mostly used for CSS changes, such as moving that code to TemplateStyles)
Currently, I'm a sysop on English Wikibooks, English Wikiquote, and Meta-Wiki, so I am familiar with the administrator toolkit. I have been a curator since March-April of this year.<!-- Should I be granted custodian rights, please remove my curator rights, but if my custodian rights were removed in the same manner, please restore my curator rights. --> I'm willing to serve as a probationary custodian for a period of four weeks, and when it's time, I will run for permanent custodianship. Thank you for considering me. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:56, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
Available to mentor. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:44, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
Codename Noreste is a proactive contributor to Wikiversity administrative tasks and discussions, brings useful Wikimedia project knowledge/experience, and communicates effectively. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:50, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{Support}}, skilled user.--[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:12, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}}, trusted, active, and helpful user - seems fine. [[User:Ternera|Ternera]] ([[User talk:Ternera|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ternera|contribs]]) 13:36, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
1zrp8un0s6atxjo55nv81lbzr9kekva
2808985
2808875
2026-05-13T23:26:57Z
PieWriter
3039865
/* Comments */
2808985
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|Codename Noreste}} ===
Hello, everyone. Per the [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats|call listed at WV:NOTICE]], I am running for custodianship. Here is what I plan to do with my new custodian abilities:
* Block vandals, spammers, and LTAs; on the other hand, I would unblock users if there are potential false positives from the abuse filter.
* Delete and view deleted content, and possibly restore if there is consensus.
* Manage abuse filters for maintenance and fixes.
* Modify the user interface for dark mode support (although I am running for interface administrator, that is mostly used for CSS changes, such as moving that code to TemplateStyles)
Currently, I'm a sysop on English Wikibooks, English Wikiquote, and Meta-Wiki, so I am familiar with the administrator toolkit. I have been a curator since March-April of this year.<!-- Should I be granted custodian rights, please remove my curator rights, but if my custodian rights were removed in the same manner, please restore my curator rights. --> I'm willing to serve as a probationary custodian for a period of four weeks, and when it's time, I will run for permanent custodianship. Thank you for considering me. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:56, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
Available to mentor. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:44, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
Codename Noreste is a proactive contributor to Wikiversity administrative tasks and discussions, brings useful Wikimedia project knowledge/experience, and communicates effectively. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:50, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{Support}}, skilled user.--[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:12, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}}, trusted, active, and helpful user - seems fine. [[User:Ternera|Ternera]] ([[User talk:Ternera|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ternera|contribs]]) 13:36, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:26, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
mfx3fra45nhmslqagncaa57t22mwqbj
2809033
2808985
2026-05-14T03:01:25Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Comments */ + support
2809033
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|Codename Noreste}} ===
Hello, everyone. Per the [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats|call listed at WV:NOTICE]], I am running for custodianship. Here is what I plan to do with my new custodian abilities:
* Block vandals, spammers, and LTAs; on the other hand, I would unblock users if there are potential false positives from the abuse filter.
* Delete and view deleted content, and possibly restore if there is consensus.
* Manage abuse filters for maintenance and fixes.
* Modify the user interface for dark mode support (although I am running for interface administrator, that is mostly used for CSS changes, such as moving that code to TemplateStyles)
Currently, I'm a sysop on English Wikibooks, English Wikiquote, and Meta-Wiki, so I am familiar with the administrator toolkit. I have been a curator since March-April of this year.<!-- Should I be granted custodian rights, please remove my curator rights, but if my custodian rights were removed in the same manner, please restore my curator rights. --> I'm willing to serve as a probationary custodian for a period of four weeks, and when it's time, I will run for permanent custodianship. Thank you for considering me. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:56, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
Available to mentor. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:44, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
*{{Support}} Codename Noreste is a proactive contributor to Wikiversity administrative tasks and discussions, brings useful Wikimedia project knowledge/experience, and communicates effectively. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:50, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{Support}}, skilled user.--[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:12, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}}, trusted, active, and helpful user - seems fine. [[User:Ternera|Ternera]] ([[User talk:Ternera|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ternera|contribs]]) 13:36, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:26, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
ssc9o5cjr389ukuicm53n8mz3geiooy
2809041
2809033
2026-05-14T03:13:53Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Comments */ {{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Codename Noreste]]
2809041
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|Codename Noreste}} ===
Hello, everyone. Per the [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats|call listed at WV:NOTICE]], I am running for custodianship. Here is what I plan to do with my new custodian abilities:
* Block vandals, spammers, and LTAs; on the other hand, I would unblock users if there are potential false positives from the abuse filter.
* Delete and view deleted content, and possibly restore if there is consensus.
* Manage abuse filters for maintenance and fixes.
* Modify the user interface for dark mode support (although I am running for interface administrator, that is mostly used for CSS changes, such as moving that code to TemplateStyles)
Currently, I'm a sysop on English Wikibooks, English Wikiquote, and Meta-Wiki, so I am familiar with the administrator toolkit. I have been a curator since March-April of this year.<!-- Should I be granted custodian rights, please remove my curator rights, but if my custodian rights were removed in the same manner, please restore my curator rights. --> I'm willing to serve as a probationary custodian for a period of four weeks, and when it's time, I will run for permanent custodianship. Thank you for considering me. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:56, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
Available to mentor. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:44, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
*{{Support}} Codename Noreste is a proactive contributor to Wikiversity administrative tasks and discussions, brings useful Wikimedia project knowledge/experience, and communicates effectively. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:50, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{Support}}, skilled user.--[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:12, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}}, trusted, active, and helpful user - seems fine. [[User:Ternera|Ternera]] ([[User talk:Ternera|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ternera|contribs]]) 13:36, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:26, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Codename Noreste]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:13, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
mdqi4fxpk6c2cp1zw1juq0ipxqu5jp1
2809095
2809041
2026-05-14T05:32:38Z
Koavf
147
/* Comments */
2809095
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|Codename Noreste}} ===
Hello, everyone. Per the [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats|call listed at WV:NOTICE]], I am running for custodianship. Here is what I plan to do with my new custodian abilities:
* Block vandals, spammers, and LTAs; on the other hand, I would unblock users if there are potential false positives from the abuse filter.
* Delete and view deleted content, and possibly restore if there is consensus.
* Manage abuse filters for maintenance and fixes.
* Modify the user interface for dark mode support (although I am running for interface administrator, that is mostly used for CSS changes, such as moving that code to TemplateStyles)
Currently, I'm a sysop on English Wikibooks, English Wikiquote, and Meta-Wiki, so I am familiar with the administrator toolkit. I have been a curator since March-April of this year.<!-- Should I be granted custodian rights, please remove my curator rights, but if my custodian rights were removed in the same manner, please restore my curator rights. --> I'm willing to serve as a probationary custodian for a period of four weeks, and when it's time, I will run for permanent custodianship. Thank you for considering me. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:56, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
Available to mentor. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:44, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
*{{Support}} Codename Noreste is a proactive contributor to Wikiversity administrative tasks and discussions, brings useful Wikimedia project knowledge/experience, and communicates effectively. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:50, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{Support}}, skilled user.--[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:12, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}}, trusted, active, and helpful user - seems fine. [[User:Ternera|Ternera]] ([[User talk:Ternera|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ternera|contribs]]) 13:36, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:26, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Codename Noreste]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:13, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trust and helpful user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:32, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
ikiimm6symmiy7c8tt8h5y46ax6oi4x
2809104
2809095
2026-05-14T06:46:53Z
Saroj
2896480
/* Comments */ Support
2809104
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|Codename Noreste}} ===
Hello, everyone. Per the [[Wikiversity:Notices for custodians#Call for custodians and bureaucrats|call listed at WV:NOTICE]], I am running for custodianship. Here is what I plan to do with my new custodian abilities:
* Block vandals, spammers, and LTAs; on the other hand, I would unblock users if there are potential false positives from the abuse filter.
* Delete and view deleted content, and possibly restore if there is consensus.
* Manage abuse filters for maintenance and fixes.
* Modify the user interface for dark mode support (although I am running for interface administrator, that is mostly used for CSS changes, such as moving that code to TemplateStyles)
Currently, I'm a sysop on English Wikibooks, English Wikiquote, and Meta-Wiki, so I am familiar with the administrator toolkit. I have been a curator since March-April of this year.<!-- Should I be granted custodian rights, please remove my curator rights, but if my custodian rights were removed in the same manner, please restore my curator rights. --> I'm willing to serve as a probationary custodian for a period of four weeks, and when it's time, I will run for permanent custodianship. Thank you for considering me. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 18:56, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
Available to mentor. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:44, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
*{{Support}} Codename Noreste is a proactive contributor to Wikiversity administrative tasks and discussions, brings useful Wikimedia project knowledge/experience, and communicates effectively. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 21:50, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{Support}}, skilled user.--[[User:Juandev|Juandev]] ([[User talk:Juandev|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Juandev|contribs]]) 09:12, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}}, trusted, active, and helpful user - seems fine. [[User:Ternera|Ternera]] ([[User talk:Ternera|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Ternera|contribs]]) 13:36, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} [[User:PieWriter|PieWriter]] ([[User talk:PieWriter|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/PieWriter|contribs]]) 23:26, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/Codename Noreste]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:13, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{support}} Globally trust and helpful user. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:32, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
*{{Support}}, trusted user. --[[User:Saroj|Saroj]] ([[User talk:Saroj|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Saroj|contribs]]) 06:46, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
e93cf6v6yd76tcvdo3p4vezapqkyutu
Template talk:Wikiversity organization
11
329585
2808867
2808780
2026-05-13T12:54:26Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
/* Edits */ reply to Jtneill: Looks good. (-) ([[mw:c:Special:MyLanguage/User:JWBTH/CD|CD]])
2808867
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Edits==
{{ping|Codename Noreste}} I'm happy to lose [[:File:Wikiversity cup.jpg]] from this template because it just added clutter, but the template now shows a dark square in dark mode and is wider than it needs to be? -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 22:18, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
: That’s because I used {{tlx|Robelbox}} in the same manner that {{tlx|Administering Wikiversity}} does, but I can restore this template back with a TemplateStyles CSS page (mostly for dark mode support). [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 22:22, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
::OK - I tried to improve the appearance with robelbox - see what you think -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 09:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
::: Looks good. [[User:Codename Noreste|Codename Noreste]] ([[User talk:Codename Noreste|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/Codename Noreste|contribs]]) 12:54, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
pa80gqt3a4m9dgk2bk5nxq6s4u4kb1m
Wikiversity:Candidates for Custodianship/PieWriter
4
329602
2809009
2808799
2026-05-14T01:08:00Z
PieWriter
3039865
Removed redirect to [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/PieWriter]]
2809009
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|PieWriter}} ===
Hello everyone! I am submitting my request for temporary custodianship for 4 weeks following the recent notice seeking additional custodians. I believe I can contribute positively to the project.
If granted the tools, I would be able to block LTAs and spambots, which may try to disrupt. I already have curator rights, but they do not allow me to <code>block</code> users. I would also be able to <code>undelete</code> pages in order to help with the undeletion requests.
I already have experience working with advanced permissions on Wikiquote, where I am an administrator, so I am familiar with the responsibilities and expectations that come with administrator access. I understand the importance of using the tools carefully, and only when necessary.
Thanks for considering me :)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
hq51c40p8v3szgmxxi8too8ffoqk21p
2809010
2809009
2026-05-14T01:10:11Z
PieWriter
3039865
2809010
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|PieWriter}} ===
Hello everyone! I am submitting my request for temporary custodianship for 4 weeks following the recent notice seeking additional custodians. I believe I can contribute positively to the project.
If granted the tools, I would be able to block LTAs and spambots, who may try to disrupt the project. I already have curator rights, but they do not allow me to <code>block</code> users. I would also be able to <code>undelete</code> pages in order to help with the undeletion requests.
I already have experience working with advanced permissions on Wikiquote, where I am an administrator, so I am familiar with the responsibilities and expectations that come with administrator access. I understand the importance of using the tools carefully, and only when necessary.
Thanks for considering me :)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
e7sp0e0yentxv4732oahi8qju6hk9xh
2809034
2809010
2026-05-14T03:05:20Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Comments */ Support
2809034
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|PieWriter}} ===
Hello everyone! I am submitting my request for temporary custodianship for 4 weeks following the recent notice seeking additional custodians. I believe I can contribute positively to the project.
If granted the tools, I would be able to block LTAs and spambots, who may try to disrupt the project. I already have curator rights, but they do not allow me to <code>block</code> users. I would also be able to <code>undelete</code> pages in order to help with the undeletion requests.
I already have experience working with advanced permissions on Wikiquote, where I am an administrator, so I am familiar with the responsibilities and expectations that come with administrator access. I understand the importance of using the tools carefully, and only when necessary.
Thanks for considering me :)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
* {{support}} PieWriter seems to know their way around wiki admin, has been contributing positively in this respect to Wikiversity, and is communicative. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
1xk2z8ihirvcqmw4rbme3wxeg5g8q2g
2809035
2809034
2026-05-14T03:06:07Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Custodians offering mentorship */ Hopefully someone else might step in here and mentor, but I am available.
2809035
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|PieWriter}} ===
Hello everyone! I am submitting my request for temporary custodianship for 4 weeks following the recent notice seeking additional custodians. I believe I can contribute positively to the project.
If granted the tools, I would be able to block LTAs and spambots, who may try to disrupt the project. I already have curator rights, but they do not allow me to <code>block</code> users. I would also be able to <code>undelete</code> pages in order to help with the undeletion requests.
I already have experience working with advanced permissions on Wikiquote, where I am an administrator, so I am familiar with the responsibilities and expectations that come with administrator access. I understand the importance of using the tools carefully, and only when necessary.
Thanks for considering me :)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
* Hopefully someone else might step in here and mentor, but I am available. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
* {{support}} PieWriter seems to know their way around wiki admin, has been contributing positively in this respect to Wikiversity, and is communicative. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
b3wkhvjjvulz9vmp7q585ftwwvg51xz
2809039
2809035
2026-05-14T03:12:29Z
Jtneill
10242
{{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/PieWriter]]
2809039
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|PieWriter}} ===
Hello everyone! I am submitting my request for temporary custodianship for 4 weeks following the recent notice seeking additional custodians. I believe I can contribute positively to the project.
If granted the tools, I would be able to block LTAs and spambots, who may try to disrupt the project. I already have curator rights, but they do not allow me to <code>block</code> users. I would also be able to <code>undelete</code> pages in order to help with the undeletion requests.
I already have experience working with advanced permissions on Wikiquote, where I am an administrator, so I am familiar with the responsibilities and expectations that come with administrator access. I understand the importance of using the tools carefully, and only when necessary.
Thanks for considering me :)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
* Hopefully someone else might step in here and mentor, but I am available. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
* {{support}} PieWriter seems to know their way around wiki admin, has been contributing positively in this respect to Wikiversity, and is communicative. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/PieWriter]]
6dq70lkmapxkmwmo9v4f4febio128s4
2809040
2809039
2026-05-14T03:12:48Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Comments */ sign
2809040
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|PieWriter}} ===
Hello everyone! I am submitting my request for temporary custodianship for 4 weeks following the recent notice seeking additional custodians. I believe I can contribute positively to the project.
If granted the tools, I would be able to block LTAs and spambots, who may try to disrupt the project. I already have curator rights, but they do not allow me to <code>block</code> users. I would also be able to <code>undelete</code> pages in order to help with the undeletion requests.
I already have experience working with advanced permissions on Wikiquote, where I am an administrator, so I am familiar with the responsibilities and expectations that come with administrator access. I understand the importance of using the tools carefully, and only when necessary.
Thanks for considering me :)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
* Hopefully someone else might step in here and mentor, but I am available. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
* {{support}} PieWriter seems to know their way around wiki admin, has been contributing positively in this respect to Wikiversity, and is communicative. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/PieWriter]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:12, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
pvb099yntdwqqpbywoob2f1qslvp47k
2809097
2809040
2026-05-14T05:33:31Z
Koavf
147
/* Comments */
2809097
wikitext
text/x-wiki
=== {{User|PieWriter}} ===
Hello everyone! I am submitting my request for temporary custodianship for 4 weeks following the recent notice seeking additional custodians. I believe I can contribute positively to the project.
If granted the tools, I would be able to block LTAs and spambots, who may try to disrupt the project. I already have curator rights, but they do not allow me to <code>block</code> users. I would also be able to <code>undelete</code> pages in order to help with the undeletion requests.
I already have experience working with advanced permissions on Wikiquote, where I am an administrator, so I am familiar with the responsibilities and expectations that come with administrator access. I understand the importance of using the tools carefully, and only when necessary.
Thanks for considering me :)
==== Custodians offering mentorship ====
* Hopefully someone else might step in here and mentor, but I am available. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
==== Questions ====
==== Comments ====
* {{support}} PieWriter seems to know their way around wiki admin, has been contributing positively in this respect to Wikiversity, and is communicative. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:05, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{comment}} See also: [[Wikiversity:Candidates for Curatorship/PieWriter]] -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 03:12, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
* {{support}} Seems safe enough for temporary adminship/custodianship and if it's successful and PW is motivated, I would encourage indefinite user rights. ―[[User:Koavf|Justin (<span style="color:grey">ko'''a'''<span style="color:black">v</span>f</span>)]]<span style="color:red">❤[[User talk:Koavf|T]]☮[[Special:Contributions/Koavf|C]]☺[[Special:Emailuser/Koavf|M]]☯</span> 05:33, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
gs326rbsvobvxj7tzpiikhdk8i8jijs
File:VLSI.Arith.2A.CLA.20260513.pdf
6
329609
2808882
2026-05-13T13:52:26Z
Young1lim
21186
{{Information
|Description=Carry Lookahead Adders 2A traditional (20260513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
2808882
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Summary ==
{{Information
|Description=Carry Lookahead Adders 2A traditional (20260513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
== Licensing ==
{{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
ng7tml7v62h56yg69nk13uf7ir81tna
File:VLSI.Arith.2B.CLA.20260513.pdf
6
329610
2808883
2026-05-13T13:53:03Z
Young1lim
21186
{{Information
|Description=Carry Lookahead Adders 2B traditional (20260513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
2808883
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Summary ==
{{Information
|Description=Carry Lookahead Adders 2B traditional (20260513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
== Licensing ==
{{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
mybhxgmwhhuum7xwugnajot1rb2d4gi
File:C04.SA0.PtrOperator.1A.20260513.pdf
6
329611
2808884
2026-05-13T13:53:49Z
Young1lim
21186
{{Information
|Description=C04.SA0: Address and Dereference Operators (20260513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
2808884
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Summary ==
{{Information
|Description=C04.SA0: Address and Dereference Operators (20260513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
== Licensing ==
{{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
6bqh9k07xdczz65lj27o1ugh21l1qf7
File:Laurent.5.Permutation.6C.20260512.pdf
6
329612
2808890
2026-05-13T13:58:26Z
Young1lim
21186
{{Information
|Description=Laurent.5: Permutation 6C (2026512 - 20260511)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
2808890
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Summary ==
{{Information
|Description=Laurent.5: Permutation 6C (2026512 - 20260511)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
== Licensing ==
{{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
dbmm5rq7off66slsbbwgr1yhc6o5614
File:Laurent.5.Permutation.6C.20260513.pdf
6
329613
2808893
2026-05-13T13:59:09Z
Young1lim
21186
{{Information
|Description=Laurent.5: Permutation 6C (2026513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
2808893
wikitext
text/x-wiki
== Summary ==
{{Information
|Description=Laurent.5: Permutation 6C (2026513 - 20260512)
|Source={{own|Young1lim}}
|Date=2026-05-13
|Author=Young W. Lim
|Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
}}
== Licensing ==
{{self|GFDL|cc-by-sa-4.0,3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0}}
ag8ksuzb089m9046mcgm328hc1vll33
MediaWiki:Editinginterface
8
329614
2808917
2026-05-13T16:00:14Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
There is already a warning below the Codex warning when someone views the edit interface.
2808917
wikitext
text/x-wiki
phoiac9h4m842xq45sp7s6u21eteeq1
Template:Walsh permutation/sequences/A127944
10
329615
2808922
2026-05-13T18:50:11Z
Watchduck
137431
Created page with "<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/> {| class="wikitable sequences" !class="key"| ''n'' ! {{oeis|A127944}}(''n'') !class="border"| {{oeis|A000217}}(''n'')<br>− {{oeis|A005187}}(''n'') ! {{oeis|A000217}}(''n'' − 1)<br>− {{oeis|A011371}}(''n'') |- !class="key"| 0 |class="val"| 0 |class="border"| <span class="base">0</span> − <span class="fact">0</span> | <span class="base">0</span> − <span class="fact">0</span> |- !class="key"| 1 |class..."
2808922
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/>
{| class="wikitable sequences"
!class="key"| ''n''
! {{oeis|A127944}}(''n'')
!class="border"| {{oeis|A000217}}(''n'')<br>− {{oeis|A005187}}(''n'')
! {{oeis|A000217}}(''n'' − 1)<br>− {{oeis|A011371}}(''n'')
|-
!class="key"| 0
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span class="base">0</span> − <span class="fact">0</span>
| <span class="base">0</span> − <span class="fact">0</span>
|-
!class="key"| 1
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span class="base">1</span> − <span class="fact">1</span>
| <span class="base">0</span> − <span class="fact">0</span>
|-
!class="key"| 2
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span class="base">3</span> − <span class="fact">3</span>
| <span class="base">1</span> − <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 3
|class="val"| 2
|class="border"| <span class="base">6</span> − <span class="fact">4</span>
| <span class="base">3</span> − <span class="fact">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 4
|class="val"| 3
|class="border"| <span class="base">10</span> − <span class="fact">7</span>
| <span class="base">6</span> − <span class="fact">3</span>
|-
!class="key"| 5
|class="val"| 7
|class="border"| <span class="base">15</span> − <span class="fact">8</span>
| <span class="base">10</span> − <span class="fact">3</span>
|-
!class="key"| 6
|class="val"| 11
|class="border"| <span class="base">21</span> − <span class="fact">10</span>
| <span class="base">15</span> − <span class="fact">4</span>
|-
!class="key"| 7
|class="val"| 17
|class="border"| <span class="base">28</span> − <span class="fact">11</span>
| <span class="base">21</span> − <span class="fact">4</span>
|-
!class="key"| 8
|class="val"| 21
|class="border"| <span class="base">36</span> − <span class="fact">15</span>
| <span class="base">28</span> − <span class="fact">7</span>
|-
!class="key"| 9
|class="val"| 29
|class="border"| <span class="base">45</span> − <span class="fact">16</span>
| <span class="base">36</span> − <span class="fact">7</span>
|-
!class="key"| 10
|class="val"| 37
|class="border"| <span class="base">55</span> − <span class="fact">18</span>
| <span class="base">45</span> − <span class="fact">8</span>
|}
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
ospqsicshyrk65g3i8f3qhhg02wvkbt
2808925
2808922
2026-05-13T19:10:35Z
Watchduck
137431
2808925
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/>
{| class="wikitable sequences"
!class="key"| ''n''
! {{oeis|A127944}}(''n'')
!class="border"| {{oeis|A000217}}(''n'')<br>− {{oeis|A005187}}(''n'')
! {{oeis|A000217}}(''n'' − 1)<br>− {{oeis|A011371}}(''n'')
|-
!class="key"| 0
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">0</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">0</span>
| − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">0</span>
|-
!class="key"| 1
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">1</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">1</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">0</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">0</span>
|-
!class="key"| 2
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">3</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">3</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">1</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 3
|class="val"| 2
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">6</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">4</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">3</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 4
|class="val"| 3
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">10</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">7</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">6</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">3</span>
|-
!class="key"| 5
|class="val"| 7
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">15</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">8</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">10</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">3</span>
|-
!class="key"| 6
|class="val"| 11
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">21</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">10</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">15</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">4</span>
|-
!class="key"| 7
|class="val"| 17
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">28</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">11</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">21</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">4</span>
|-
!class="key"| 8
|class="val"| 21
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">36</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">15</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">28</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">7</span>
|-
!class="key"| 9
|class="val"| 29
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">45</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">16</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">36</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">7</span>
|-
!class="key"| 10
|class="val"| 37
|class="border"| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">55</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">18</span>
| <span style="background-color: #e6be7f">45</span> − <span style="background-color: #cfe3a1">8</span>
|}
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
6rf8autl17i3tqivbp4baarxmz27usr
2809132
2808925
2026-05-14T11:41:03Z
Watchduck
137431
2809132
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Walsh permutation/sequences/styles.css"/>
{| class="wikitable sequences"
!class="key"| ''n''
! {{oeis|A127944}}(''n'')
!class="border"| {{oeis|A000217}}(''n'')<br>− {{oeis|A005187}}(''n'')
! {{oeis|A161680}}(''n'')<br>− {{oeis|A011371}}(''n'')
|-
!class="key"| 0
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">0</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">0</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">0</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">0</span>
|-
!class="key"| 1
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">1</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">1</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">0</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">0</span>
|-
!class="key"| 2
|class="val"| 0
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">3</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">3</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">1</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 3
|class="val"| 2
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">6</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">4</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">3</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">1</span>
|-
!class="key"| 4
|class="val"| 3
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">10</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">7</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">6</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">3</span>
|-
!class="key"| 5
|class="val"| 7
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">15</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">8</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">10</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">3</span>
|-
!class="key"| 6
|class="val"| 11
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">21</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">10</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">15</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">4</span>
|-
!class="key"| 7
|class="val"| 17
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">28</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">11</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">21</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">4</span>
|-
!class="key"| 8
|class="val"| 21
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">36</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">15</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">28</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">7</span>
|-
!class="key"| 9
|class="val"| 29
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">45</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">16</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">36</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">7</span>
|-
!class="key"| 10
|class="val"| 37
|class="border"| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">55</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">18</span>
| <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #f16ca7">45</span> − <span style="padding: 2px; background-color: #7ee13c">8</span>
|}
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
ndkijyr5ppfw3gyr8ue63i8b2324for
Citizen journalism
0
329616
2808945
2026-05-13T21:29:27Z
BigKrow
3069766
Created page with "Citizen journalism is a form of journalism. {{Stub}}"
2808945
wikitext
text/x-wiki
Citizen journalism is a form of journalism.
{{Stub}}
esfb18wkq05m5x0n5rgow2bxu2hbhv5
2808947
2808945
2026-05-13T21:31:22Z
BigKrow
3069766
2808947
wikitext
text/x-wiki
'''Citizen journalism''' is a form of [[journalism]].
{{Stub}}
fb9su72g4cczivi3r2p4dc1yfbqp5at
Draft:Journalism
118
329617
2808956
2026-05-13T22:03:52Z
BigKrow
3069766
Created page with "This is about journalism. {{stub}}"
2808956
wikitext
text/x-wiki
This is about journalism.
{{stub}}
gtw0gc03j8attt5egzlamwhnen0h30k
Manchester City moved two points behind Arsenal
0
329618
2808987
2026-05-13T23:29:19Z
BigKrow
3069766
Testing
2808987
wikitext
text/x-wiki
Manchester City is two points behind Arsenal.
{{stub}}
[[Category:News]]
altrizf82d60f2aspuqvcm477tytcmv
2808988
2808987
2026-05-13T23:30:30Z
BigKrow
3069766
2808988
wikitext
text/x-wiki
Manchester City is two points behind Arsenal.
{{stub}}
{{news|Football}}
[[Category:News]]
37yplxdr287k8oiuo2qsq7evnv97wbh
2808989
2808988
2026-05-13T23:31:54Z
BigKrow
3069766
2808989
wikitext
text/x-wiki
Manchester City is two points behind Arsenal.
{{stub}}
{{news|Football}}
[[Category:News]]
[[Category:Sports]]
5qygqdcocj45tuvvwfa7ku5stzm5u5u
2808990
2808989
2026-05-13T23:33:02Z
BigKrow
3069766
2808990
wikitext
text/x-wiki
Manchester City is two points behind Arsenal.
{{stub}}
{{news|Football}}
[[Category:News]]
[[Category:Sports]]
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/live-blogs/manchester-city-vs-crystal-palace-live-updates-premier-league-score-result/EyTFO6lxeAYd/
jj76h3e0xfxtr470fjh8z8z75y2msa9
Talk:Story/Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal
1
329619
2808999
2026-05-14T00:22:05Z
Jtneill
10242
Relevance
2808999
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Relevance==
{{Ping|BigKrow}} My thoughts:
* This page sounds like it is more relevant to [[w:2025–26 Premier League]]
* What is the educational objective? (see [[Wikiversity:Mission]])
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:21, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
6i6kgbgwn6kfmoepkdqo97kp1ddjvge
2809018
2808999
2026-05-14T02:00:05Z
BigKrow
3069766
/* Relevance */ Reply
2809018
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Relevance==
{{Ping|BigKrow}} My thoughts:
* This page sounds like it is more relevant to [[w:2025–26 Premier League]]
* What is the educational objective? (see [[Wikiversity:Mission]])
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:21, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:Maybe I should only do world news? @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:00, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
8s24l0g00qb92ol4g7y1kyfxanvq3o8
2809021
2809018
2026-05-14T02:00:47Z
BigKrow
3069766
BigKrow moved page [[Talk:Manchester City moved two points behind Arsenal]] to [[Talk:Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]]
2809018
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Relevance==
{{Ping|BigKrow}} My thoughts:
* This page sounds like it is more relevant to [[w:2025–26 Premier League]]
* What is the educational objective? (see [[Wikiversity:Mission]])
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:21, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:Maybe I should only do world news? @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:00, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
8s24l0g00qb92ol4g7y1kyfxanvq3o8
2809031
2809021
2026-05-14T02:56:30Z
Jtneill
10242
/* Relevance */ Reply
2809031
wikitext
text/x-wiki
==Relevance==
{{Ping|BigKrow}} My thoughts:
* This page sounds like it is more relevant to [[w:2025–26 Premier League]]
* What is the educational objective? (see [[Wikiversity:Mission]])
-- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 00:21, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
:Maybe I should only do world news? @[[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] [[User:BigKrow|BigKrow]] ([[User talk:BigKrow|discuss]] • [[Special:Contributions/BigKrow|contribs]]) 02:00, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
::For me the broader question is: In which part(s) of the WMF wiki ecosystem does a particular piece of knowledge best belong? If there is a clearly articulated educational objective, then it is likely welcome on Wikiversity. If not, it probably best belongs elsewhere. -- [[User:Jtneill|Jtneill]] - <small>[[User talk:Jtneill|Talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Jtneill|c]]</small> 02:56, 14 May 2026 (UTC)
77khz7r8qthva81vs14xaofxpsa5lgj
Module:Shortcut/styles.css
828
329620
2809019
2025-12-16T01:24:24Z
q>Codename Noreste
0
Removing a nonexistent protection template.
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sanitized-css
text/css
.module-shortcutboxplain {
float: right;
margin: 0 0 0 1em;
border: 1px solid var(--border-color-base, #a2a9b1);
background-color: var(--background-color-base, #fff);
padding: 0.3em 0.6em 0.2em 0.6em;
text-align: center;
font-size: 85%;
}
.module-shortcutboxleft {
float: left;
margin: 0 1em 0 0;
}
.module-shortcutlist {
display: inline-block;
border-bottom: 1px solid var(--border-color-base, #a2a9b1);
margin-bottom: 0.2em;
}
.module-shortcutboxplain ul {
font-weight: bold;
}
.module-shortcutanchordiv {
position: relative;
top: -3em;
}
li .module-shortcutanchordiv {
float: right; /* IE/Edge in list items */
}
.mbox-imageright .module-shortcutboxplain {
padding: 0.4em 1em;
line-height: 1.3;
margin: 0;
float: initial;
}
ayu8tqvvm7ou3165bvolzgsjnh9jwdu
2809020
2809019
2026-05-14T02:00:21Z
Codename Noreste
2969951
1 revision imported from [[:q:Module:Shortcut/styles.css]]
2809019
sanitized-css
text/css
.module-shortcutboxplain {
float: right;
margin: 0 0 0 1em;
border: 1px solid var(--border-color-base, #a2a9b1);
background-color: var(--background-color-base, #fff);
padding: 0.3em 0.6em 0.2em 0.6em;
text-align: center;
font-size: 85%;
}
.module-shortcutboxleft {
float: left;
margin: 0 1em 0 0;
}
.module-shortcutlist {
display: inline-block;
border-bottom: 1px solid var(--border-color-base, #a2a9b1);
margin-bottom: 0.2em;
}
.module-shortcutboxplain ul {
font-weight: bold;
}
.module-shortcutanchordiv {
position: relative;
top: -3em;
}
li .module-shortcutanchordiv {
float: right; /* IE/Edge in list items */
}
.mbox-imageright .module-shortcutboxplain {
padding: 0.4em 1em;
line-height: 1.3;
margin: 0;
float: initial;
}
ayu8tqvvm7ou3165bvolzgsjnh9jwdu
Talk:Manchester City moved two points behind Arsenal
1
329621
2809022
2026-05-14T02:00:47Z
BigKrow
3069766
BigKrow moved page [[Talk:Manchester City moved two points behind Arsenal]] to [[Talk:Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]]
2809022
wikitext
text/x-wiki
#REDIRECT [[Talk:Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal]]
5xxlf3gaett2o4p7vp4ucglg9o345ay
Story/Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal
0
329622
2809023
2026-05-14T02:01:24Z
BigKrow
3069766
Created page with "Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal."
2809023
wikitext
text/x-wiki
Manchester City moves two points behind Arsenal.
bynxqu5gko4wbf0a9j2hiiio00npzq2
Template:Walsh permutation/sequences/A023758/entries
10
329623
2809107
2026-05-14T10:10:30Z
Watchduck
137431
Created page with "<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" /> {| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;" ! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 !! 7 !! 8 !!class="sum"| sums |- ! 1 | 1 |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="sum"| xxx |- ! 2 | 2 | 3 |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy..."
2809107
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" />
{| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;"
! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 !! 7 !! 8 !!class="sum"| sums
|-
! 1
| 1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| xxx
|-
! 2
| 2
| 3
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| xxx
|-
! 3
| 4
| 6
| 7
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| xxx
|-
! 4
| 8
| 12
| 14
| 15
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| xxx
|-
! 5
| 16
| 24
| 28
| 30
| 31
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| xxx
|-
! 6
| 32
| 48
| 56
| 60
| 62
| 63
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| xxx
|-
! 7
| 64
| 96
| 112
| 120
| 124
| 126
| 127
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| xxx
|-
! 8
| 128
| 192
| 224
| 240
| 248
| 252
| 254
| 255
|class="sum"| xxx
|}<noinclude>
[[Category:Triangle pair Cedar]]
<noinclude>
4k8xn6w0tz4759rgo4eweods81c5a7u
2809110
2809107
2026-05-14T10:25:54Z
Watchduck
137431
2809110
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" />
{| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;"
! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 !! 7 !! 8 !!class="sum"| sums !!class="sum"| products
|-
! 1
| 1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 1
|class="sum"| 1
|-
! 2
| 2
| 3
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 5
|class="sum"| 6
|-
! 3
| 4
| 6
| 7
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 17
|class="sum"| 168
|-
! 4
| 8
| 12
| 14
| 15
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 49
|class="sum"| 20160
|-
! 5
| 16
| 24
| 28
| 30
| 31
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 129
|class="sum"|
|-
! 6
| 32
| 48
| 56
| 60
| 62
| 63
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 321
|class="sum"|
|-
! 7
| 64
| 96
| 112
| 120
| 124
| 126
| 127
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 769
|class="sum"|
|-
! 8
| 128
| 192
| 224
| 240
| 248
| 252
| 254
| 255
|class="sum"| 1793
|class="sum"|
|}<noinclude>
[[Category:Triangle pair Cedar]]
<noinclude>
pblmbob60s80vjjes9pysrn5cxnuqyz
2809114
2809110
2026-05-14T10:44:44Z
Watchduck
137431
2809114
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" />
{| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;"
! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 !!class="sum"| sums !!class="sum"| products
|-
! 1
| 1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 1
|class="sum"| 1
|-
! 2
| 2
| 3
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 5
|class="sum"| 6
|-
! 3
| 4
| 6
| 7
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 17
|class="sum"| 168
|-
! 4
| 8
| 12
| 14
| 15
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 49
|class="sum"| 20160
|-
! 5
| 16
| 24
| 28
| 30
| 31
|class="dummy"|
|class="sum"| 129
|class="sum"| 9999360
|-
! 6
| 32
| 48
| 56
| 60
| 62
| 63
|class="sum"| 321
|class="sum"| 20158709760
|}<noinclude>
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
<noinclude>
fo5eehzqmerfghd49zvr5pm8suydfca
2809116
2809114
2026-05-14T10:45:27Z
Watchduck
137431
2809116
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" />
{| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;"
! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6
|-
! 1
| 1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 2
| 2
| 3
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 3
| 4
| 6
| 7
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 4
| 8
| 12
| 14
| 15
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 5
| 16
| 24
| 28
| 30
| 31
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 6
| 32
| 48
| 56
| 60
| 62
| 63
|}<noinclude>
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
<noinclude>
kzgzrxwrhfki1rir5kv5n8w2tzz43l2
Template:Walsh permutation/sequences/A023758/diff
10
329624
2809111
2026-05-14T10:33:01Z
Watchduck
137431
Created page with "<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" /> {| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;" ! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 |- ! 1 | 2−1 |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |- ! 2 | 4−2 | 4−1 |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |- ! 3 | 8−4 | 8−2 | 8−1 |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |- !..."
2809111
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" />
{| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;"
! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6
|-
! 1
| 2−1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 2
| 4−2
| 4−1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 3
| 8−4
| 8−2
| 8−1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 4
| 16−8
| 16−4
| 16−2
| 16−1
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 5
| 32−16
| 32−8
| 32−4
| 32−2
| 32−1
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 6
| 64−32
| 64−16
| 64−8
| 64−4
| 64−2
| 64−1
|}<noinclude>
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
</noinclude>
9aikvub3e0nhn1b2ue25cwoqox54iz7
2809113
2809111
2026-05-14T10:42:22Z
Watchduck
137431
2809113
wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" />
{| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;"
! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6
|-
! 1
| 2−<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 2
| 4−<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 4−<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 3
| 8−<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 8−<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 8−<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 4
| 16−<span style="color: red;">8</span>
| 16−<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 16−<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 16−<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 5
| 32−<span style="color: red;">16</span>
| 32−<span style="color: red;">8</span>
| 32−<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 32−<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 32−<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 6
| 64−<span style="color: red;">32</span>
| 64−<span style="color: red;">16</span>
| 64−<span style="color: red;">8</span>
| 64−<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 64−<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 64−<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|}<noinclude>
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
</noinclude>
qhd3qz4m7425mpg5qo7ilhph6mpfj70
Template:Walsh permutation/sequences/A023758/prod
10
329625
2809112
2026-05-14T10:41:25Z
Watchduck
137431
Created page with "<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" /> {| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;" ! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 |- ! 1 | 1·<span style="color: red;">1</span> |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |- ! 2 | 1·<span style="color: red;">2</span> | 3·<span style="color: red;">1</span> |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |class="dummy"| |cl..."
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wikitext
text/x-wiki
<templatestyles src="Template:Boolf triangles/style.css" />
{| class="wikitable boolf-triangle" style="text-align: center;"
! {{diagonal split header|''{{{1|n}}}''|''{{{2|k}}}''}} !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6
|-
! 1
| 1·<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 2
| 1·<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 3·<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 3
| 1·<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 3·<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 7·<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 4
| 1·<span style="color: red;">8</span>
| 3·<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 7·<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 15·<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 5
| 1·<span style="color: red;">16</span>
| 3·<span style="color: red;">8</span>
| 7·<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 15·<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 31·<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|class="dummy"|
|-
! 6
| 1·<span style="color: red;">32</span>
| 3·<span style="color: red;">16</span>
| 7·<span style="color: red;">8</span>
| 15·<span style="color: red;">4</span>
| 31·<span style="color: red;">2</span>
| 63·<span style="color: red;">1</span>
|}<noinclude>
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
</noinclude>
8724vtmzs2k16xxbv6j2sbzqxew9cwf
User:Dekatriofovia/Temporary ND Inspired Idea Notebook
2
329626
2809115
2026-05-14T10:45:19Z
Dekatriofovia
3058633
Video notes plan
2809115
wikitext
text/x-wiki
The main diary is here: [[User:ThinkingScience/ND_Inspired_Idea_Notebook|Daily Diary of ND Inspired Idea]]
The reason for this temporary diary is until I get my new monitor so I can use the account which makes it easier for my back, my health to prosper.(I need to look down at the computer right now and my shoulders get more tense due to the stress of having my hands more forward rather than relaxed) which I see as a problem)
== Temporary "Diary" ==
=== May 14, 2026 ===
Today renewed interest, considering doing something more regarding [[Draft:The Neurodiversity-inspired Idea/Method development through video notes]].
It's not technically hard. It's emotionally hard because I'm doing something that I am not very sure will respect the people in a "Do no harm" way. It's a difficult "grey line" to tread. As long as I am respectful this will work fine. I'm only planning to be respectful to the people I'm making notes about, let's see what more happens today.
nt6wgvsffyf31zgoab9xdhe1u1mqb2l
Template:Walsh permutation/sequences/A023758
10
329627
2809136
2026-05-14T11:52:38Z
Watchduck
137431
Created page with "{| class="wikitable" | T(''n'', ''k'') = 2<sup>''n''</sup> − <span style="color: red;">2<sup>''n'' − ''k''</sup></span> | The sum of row ''n'' is {{oeis|A000337}}(''n'') = ''n'' · 2<sup>''n''</sup> − <span style="color: red;">(2<sup>''n''</sup> − 1)</span> <span style="color: gray;">= (''n''−1) · 2<sup>''n''</sup> + 1</span>. {{spaces|3}}</small> |- | T(''n'', ''k'') = (2<sup>''k''</sup> − 1) · <span style="color: red;">2<sup>''n'' − ''k''</sup></span> |..."
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wikitext
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{| class="wikitable"
| T(''n'', ''k'') = 2<sup>''n''</sup> − <span style="color: red;">2<sup>''n'' − ''k''</sup></span>
| The sum of row ''n'' is {{oeis|A000337}}(''n'') = ''n'' · 2<sup>''n''</sup> − <span style="color: red;">(2<sup>''n''</sup> − 1)</span> <span style="color: gray;">= (''n''−1) · 2<sup>''n''</sup> + 1</span>. {{spaces|3}}</small>
|-
| T(''n'', ''k'') = (2<sup>''k''</sup> − 1) · <span style="color: red;">2<sup>''n'' − ''k''</sup></span>
| The product of row ''n'' is {{oeis|A002884}}(''n'') = {{oeis|A005329}}(''n'') · {{oeis|A006125}}(''n'').</small>
|}
{|
| {{Walsh permutation/sequences/A023758/entries}}
|style="padding-left: 50px;"| {{Walsh permutation/sequences/A023758/diff}}
|style="padding-left: 50px;"| {{Walsh permutation/sequences/A023758/prod}}
|}
<noinclude>
[[Category:Walsh permutation; templates]]
</noinclude>
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