The death of Wikipedia

Posted by Marshall on May 24, 2006 | Link It

Wikipedia died last Friday, according to Nicholas Carr.

The end came last Friday. That’s when Wikipedia’s founder, Jimmy Wales, proposed "that we eliminate the requirement that semi-protected articles have to announce themselves as such to the general public." The "general public," you see, is now an entity separate and distinct from those who actually control the creation of Wikipedia. As Vaughan-Nichols says, "And the difference between Wikipedia and a conventionally edited publication is what exactly?"

Given that Wikipedia has been, and continues to be, the poster child for the brave new world of democratic, "citizen" media, where quality naturally "emerges" from the myriad contributions of a crowd, it’s worth quoting Wales’s epitaph for Wikipedia at length……

As it turns out, Jimmy Wales commented on Nicholas Carr’s Blog - Rough Type -

."There have always been restrictions on editing," he says. I guess I made the mistake, as others may have as well, of taking literally Wikipedia’s slogan that it is "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit." I apologize for my error.

But if you think about - would you really want an authoritative document on the Internet that "anyone" could edit?   Say someone wrote a Wikipedia article on me - would I want to allow just "anyone" to make an authoritative statement about me?  I don’t think so.  I think you needed and still need restrictions on who can edit a document about anything - and if that’s supposed to mean the death of Wikipeida…then so be it.

 



2 Responses

These are the current comments for "The death of Wikipedia"

05/25/06 @ 8:59 pm

“I will also warn you explicitly against using supposed encyclopedia sites such as Wikpedia, which are community edited. Since anyone can go online and edit the entry for a topic on this site, the information you obtain may not be trustworthy. I know the Internet is an easy source since it is right in front of you, but my point is that if you can reference a book or newspaper (something more reliable), then that is preferred.”

Quoting my POLI SCI TA’s assignment about a paper I had to write last semester.

I still enjoy Wikipedia’s simplicity. It’s sad & surprising that we don’t really have any so-called “commercial” encyclopedias available with the ease Wiki.

Wiki won’t be going anywhere IMHO if it can keep doing the job they are doing right now about getting the history right on latest happenings in the world. Errors happen every now and then–vandalism too…all in all, I like it.



05/25/06 @ 9:43 pm

Thanks for the comment and warning about Wikipedia, Zaid.



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