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May 4, 2005 /
Crispin Sartwell of Dickinson College in Carlisle,
Pennsylvania says Wikipedia is the best.
Encyclopedias -- whether paper (Britannica, for example) or
software (Encarta) -- are intended to be representations of
the scope of human knowledge at the moment of their
publication. This idea, of course, has a long history. But
the most interesting thing about it may be its future, as
represented by the magnificent, nonprofit Wikipedia.
"Wiki" is the Hawaiian word for
quick, and it refers to a website that can be updated easily
by anyone from any Web browser. The first wiki armature was
developed in 1995, and Wikipedia -- the brainchild of one
Jimmy Wales -- was founded in 2001. Under Wales' brilliant
conception, anyone can go into Wikipedia (wikipedia.org) and
create a new article or edit an old one: It is entirely
accessible and entirely
alterable.
This is
anarchy, of course, and completely antithetical to the
encyclopedic tradition, which has emphasized a kind of
solemn definitiveness and authority. Britannica and Encarta,
for instance, not only employ experts to write their
articles but subject everything they publish to a rigorous
review process. At Wikipedia, you (or any old maniac) can
march right onto the "nuclear fusion" page and add your
thoughts.
But as Wikipedia says about itself, the
point is not that it's hard to make mistakes but that it's
easy to correct them. Because thousands of people --
ordinary, unpaid, outside participants -- monitor and edit
Wikipedia, errors and vandalism are often corrected in
seconds. One feature of the site is a list of recently
updated pages, so that one can keep track of changes. One
can even revert to a previous version of an article if
mistaken or malevolent parties have messed it
up.
The result is not perfect. In one brief
instance, a character from "Star Wars" was labeled Benedict
XVI. But such is the exception, not the rule, and usually
quickly rectified. Overall, the encyclopedia gets ever
larger and ever more accurate. The English version has grown
to more than half a million entries, and in checking the
"recent changes" section I once found a dozen or more
revisions every minute. The site also provides contexts in
which changes can be proposed and discussed among
writers.
So is it to be trusted? Does it have
the credibility of Britannica? Well, I have monitored over a
decent period a number of entries on matters about which I
know something and have found them almost invariably
accurate. And I have watched some of them grow, becoming
ever more elaborate and
interlinked.
In fact, open architecture is in some
sense the only possible way to do what an encyclopedia
purports to do: represent the state of human knowledge in
real time. Such a project is by its nature so huge that it
requires what Wikipedia has: thousands of experts, editors,
checkers and so on with expertise in different fields
working over a period of years. Also, Wikipedia, unlike the
World Book, for example, or even Encarta, is updated
continuously. When we use the term "public property," we
usually mean state property, but Wikipedia compromises the
concept of ownership without dispossessing anyone: It is
truly public property.
What is perhaps most fascinating about
Wikipedia is its demonstration in practical anarchy. It is
an ever-shifting, voluntary, collaborative enterprise. If it
is in the long run successful, it would show that people can
make amazing things together without being commanded,
constrained, taxed, bribed or punished.
There are people who want to deface or
even destroy Wikipedia. The right-wing blogger Ace of Spades
-- out of mischief and because he heard Wikipedia's
operators were liberals -- recently called on its readers to
"punk" the site to put up as much misinformation and
nonsense as possible. Other blogs gleefully expose errors,
even if those defects persist only for a few
minutes.
If the vandals are successful, they'll
more or less confirm the common wisdom that people are too
evil and miserable to be allowed to govern
themselves.
But if Wikipedia grows into the
greatest reference work ever made, it will suggest that
great things are possible when you merely let people go and
see what happens.
May 4, 2005 / Crispin Sartwell of
Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsulvania says Wikipedia
is the best.
Encyclopedias -- whether paper
(Britannica, for example) or software (Encarta) -- are
intended to be representations of the scope of human
knowledge at the moment of their publication. This idea, of
course, has a long history. But the most interesting thing
about it may be its future, as represented by the
magnificent, nonprofit Wikipedia.
"Wiki" is the Hawaiian word for quick,
and it refers to a website that can be updated easily by
anyone from any Web browser. The first wiki armature was
developed in 1995, and Wikipedia -- the brainchild of one
Jimmy Wales -- was founded in 2001. Under Wales' brilliant
conception, anyone can go into Wikipedia (wikipedia.org) and
create a new article or edit an old one: It is entirely
accessible and entirely alterable.
This is anarchy, of course, and
completely antithetical to the encyclopedic tradition, which
has emphasized a kind of solemn definitiveness and
authority. Britannica and Encarta, for instance, not only
employ experts to write their articles but subject
everything they publish to a rigorous review process. At
Wikipedia, you (or any old maniac) can march right onto the
"nuclear fusion" page and add your thoughts.
But as Wikipedia says about itself, the
point is not that it's hard to make mistakes but that it's
easy to correct them. Because thousands of people --
ordinary, unpaid, outside participants -- monitor and edit
Wikipedia, errors and vandalism are often corrected in
seconds. One feature of the site is a list of recently
updated pages, so that one can keep track of changes. One
can even revert to a previous version of an article if
mistaken or malevolent parties have messed it
up.
The result is not perfect. In one brief
instance, a character from "Star Wars" was labeled Benedict
XVI. But such is the exception, not the rule, and usually
quickly rectified. Overall, the encyclopedia gets ever
larger and ever more accurate. The English version has grown
to more than half a million entries, and in checking the
"recent changes" section I once found a dozen or more
revisions every minute. The site also provides contexts in
which changes can be proposed and discussed among
writers.
So is it to be trusted? Does it have
the credibility of Britannica? Well, I have monitored over a
decent period a number of entries on matters about which I
know something and have found them almost invariably
accurate. And I have watched some of them grow, becoming
ever more elaborate and
interlinked.
In fact, open architecture is in some
sense the only possible way to do what an encyclopedia
purports to do: represent the state of human knowledge in
real time. Such a project is by its nature so huge that it
requires what Wikipedia has: thousands of experts, editors,
checkers and so on with expertise in different fields
working over a period of years. Also, Wikipedia, unlike the
World Book, for example, or even Encarta, is updated
continuously. When we use the term "public property," we
usually mean state property, but Wikipedia compromises the
concept of ownership without dispossessing anyone: It is
truly public property.
What is perhaps most fascinating about
Wikipedia is its demonstration in practical anarchy. It is
an ever-shifting, voluntary, collaborative enterprise. If it
is in the long run successful, it would show that people can
make amazing things together without being commanded,
constrained, taxed, bribed or punished.
There are people who want to deface or
even destroy Wikipedia. The right-wing blogger Ace of Spades
-- out of mischief and because he heard Wikipedia's
operators were liberals -- recently called on its readers to
"punk" the site to put up as much misinformation and
nonsense as possible. Other blogs gleefully expose errors,
even if those defects persist only for a few
minutes.
If the vandals are successful, they'll
more or less confirm the common wisdom that people are too
evil and miserable to be allowed to govern
themselves.
But if Wikipedia grows into the
greatest reference work ever made, it will suggest that
great things are possible when you merely let people go and
see what happens.
02.
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113
Q&A and Rules on How To Write or Update a Yes90,
Wikiquote News Article about, "People and Things". Hints
in preparing for your first article for Yes90 -- using
guidelines from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
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My Wikiquote using a Yes90 news category, about people, the
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Welcome! Editing your first Yes90 Article for a Wikiquote
should be a cinch. You've followed a link to a blank page
that doesn't exist yet. MORE STORY
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