Stephen Harrison is a journalist who is significant in the wiki community for his coverage of Wikipedia.
- Harrison, Stephen (2 December 2022). "The Huge Fight Behind Those Pop-Up Fundraising Banners on Wikipedia". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (21 November 2022). "No, Wikipedia Is Not Colluding With DHS". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (17 August 2022). "How Wikipedia Can Influence Judges' Legal Writing". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (7 July 2022). "It Looks Like the Highland Park Shooter Tried Repeatedly to Create His Own Wikipedia Page". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (16 June 2022). "Inside Wikipedia's Historic, Fiercely Contested "Election"". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (3 May 2022). "The Controversy Brewing on Elon Musk's Wikipedia Page". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (1 March 2022). "How the Russian Invasion of Ukraine Is Playing Out on English, Ukrainian, and Russian Wikipedia". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (9 December 2021). "The Uproar Over Jimmy Wales' Decision to Auction the "Birth of Wikipedia" as an NFT". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (26 October 2021). "Why Wikipedia Banned Several Chinese Admins". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (8 September 2021). "How Wikipedia Grew Up With the War on Terror". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (1 September 2021). "Wikipedia Is Trying to Transcend the Limits of Human Language". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (26 July 2021). "How to Use Wikipedia When You're Watching the Olympics". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (1 July 2021). "Wikipedia's War on the Daily Mail". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (2 March 2021). "The Tensions Behind Wikipedia's New Code of Conduct". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen; Benjakob, Omer (14 January 2021). "Wikipedia is twenty. It's time to start covering it better". Columbia Journalism Review.
- Harrison, Stephen (4 December 2020). "Twitter Wants to Use Wikipedia to Help Determine Who Gets a Blue Checkmark". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (27 October 2020). "Why Did It Take So Long for the Democratic Senate Candidate in Iowa to Get a Wikipedia Page?". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (9 September 2020). "What Happens to Scots Wikipedia Now?". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (9 June 2020). "How Wikipedia Became a Battleground for Racial Justice". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (27 May 2020). "Future Historians Will Need Access to Coronavirus Misinformation". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (19 March 2020). "The Coronavirus Is Stress-Testing Wikipedia's Policies". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (29 January 2020). "How Wikipedia Fought Back Against a Ban in Turkey". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (13 December 2019). "The Very Respectful Wikipedia Battles Over "OK Boomer"". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (29 August 2019). "Is Wikipedia Ready for Video?". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (16 August 2019). "Wikipedia's Parent Organization Wants to Save the World". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (7 August 2019). "Wikipedia Is Helping Keep Welsh Alive Online". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (2 July 2019). "Wikipedia Is in the Midst of a Constitutional Crisis". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (14 June 2019). "When Brands Like the North Face Manipulate Wikipedia, Should That Go on Wikipedia?". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (6 June 2019). "A New Documentary Highlights Why Yelp Feels Unfair". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (21 May 2019). "Why China Blocked Wikipedia in All Languages". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (9 May 2019). "WikiLeaks Is Not a Wiki". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (16 April 2019). "How Katie Bouman Shook Wikipedia". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (26 March 2019). "How the Sexism of the Past Reinforces Wikipedia's Gender Gap". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (7 March 2019). "The Dizzying Problem of Citationless Wikipedia "Facts" That Take On a Life of Their Own". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (15 February 2019). "Amazon's Alexa Keeps Quoting Jeff Bezos to Me". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (28 January 2019). "Don't Be Worried if Your Doctor Uses Wikipedia". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (14 January 2019). "Happy 18th birthday, Wikipedia. Let's celebrate the Internet's good grown-up". The Washington Post.
- Harrison, Stephen (17 December 2018). "Wikipedia Is Going Nuclear to Try to Stop Siri, Alexa, and Google From Giving Bad Info". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (28 March 2018). "If You See Something, Write Something". The New York Times.
- Harrison, Stephen (30 September 2018). "The Debate Over "Devil's Triangle" Shows Wikipedia at Its Best". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (16 August 2018). "Meet the People Who Quickly Update Wikipedia Pages When a Celebrity Like Aretha Franklin Dies". Slate.
- Harrison, Stephen (16 March 2018). "The Wikipedia Page for St. Patrick Is Surprisingly Good. Here's Why". Slate.