I have a new paper _Princ-wiki-a Mathematica_: Wikipedia Editing and Mathematics, https://www.ams.org/journals/notices/202501/noti3096/noti3096.html, in the January _Notices of the AMS_, and a new blog post, Pseudonymity in academic publishing, https://11011110.github.io/blog/2024/12/19/pseudonymity-academic-publishing.html
The _Notices_ paper is on editing mathematics on Wikipedia, and I hope it encourages more to do so. The blog post is on the fact that the AMS would not let us list our pseudonymous coauthor as an author. Pseudonymity is important and highly protected on Wikipedia, in part because Wikipedia editing can sometimes put its editors into serious danger, but in this case it clashed with academic publishing standards, or at least the AMS's publishing policies, and I wanted to explore that.
Some of the other material in this issue also looked interesting to me, especially nprofile1qy2hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnddaehgu3wwp6kyqpqch8hfpny6tp95jqut4smklg3nx2h93dvvw6x4jsaqzwj8u6az9lq40qmju (nprofile…qmju)'s article on machine-assisted proof (https://www.ams.org/cgi-bin/notices/nxgnotices.pl?next=202501) and Nick Trefethen's on rational approximation (https://www.ams.org/journals/notices/202501/noti3066/noti3066.html). See https://www.ams.org/cgi-bin/notices/nxgnotices.pl?next=202501 for the whole issue.