The online encyclopedia
Wikipedia was launched on
January 15, 2001
. It was co-founded by Larry
Sanger and Jimmy Wales. Sanger was a philosopher who
specialized in epistemology, which is the study of knowledge
itself — how it works, how we learn, how knowledge is spread
and why we believe what we do.
Wales
was an entrepreneur who
started out on a more traditional career path, working at a
futures and options trading firm in
Chicago
, before deciding that the
Internet was the way of the future. First
Wales
created a Web domain called Bomis, catered toward men. There were Web
rings like "babe," "sports," and
"adult." Bomis didn't really take off, but it did
make enough on advertising to fit the bills for
Wales
' next project, Nupedia.
For
Nupedia,
Wales
recruited Sanger, who was a
Ph.D. candidate in philosophy. They were both interested in
open-source software, and were excited by the idea of creating
an online encyclopedia that anyone could contribute to. They
decided that articles would go through a rigorous
peer-reviewed process to make sure they were as accurate as
those in any other encyclopedia. So they launched Nupedia in
March of 2000. Unfortunately, it didn't work very well.
Writers would get critiqued so intensely by scholarly
reviewers that they were too afraid to write more articles.
After six months, only two articles had made it through the
peer-review process. Larry Sanger was talking to a programmer,
Ben Kovitz, who explained the concept of a wiki and suggested
using wiki software for an encyclopedia, so that anyone could
write and anyone could edit, making the encyclopedia truly
collaborative. Sanger brought the idea to
Wales
, and they decided to give it a
chance. They kept it separate from Nupedia, in case it was a
failure. Instead, they called their new venture Wikipedia.
And
in almost no time Wikipedia became far more popular than
Nupedia. In 2009, the English-language version of Wikipedia
hit the 3 million-article mark when someone wrote an article
on the Norwegian actress Beate Eriksen. Since then, the number
has continued to rise, and there are about 3.5 million
articles in English. Overall, there are more than 17 million
articles in more than 270 languages.
There
are two fundamental rules for anyone who is going to write for
Wikipedia. One is that the author must attempt to be neutral
in tone. The other is that the author should choose items that
they support, not that they want to criticize. Another
less-enforced rule is that people aren't supposed to edit
entries about themselves — but many do, including Jimmy
Wales, who has edited his own entry many times, mostly to
downplay the adult content of Bomis and to give himself more
credit as the founder of Wikipedia.
A
common critique of Wikipedia is that, because anyone can write
about anything, the encyclopedia places too much emphasis on
fringe items that have cult followings — for example, one
journalist pointed out that the entry on Star Wars creatures
is one and a half times longer than the entry on World War II;
another noticed that the entry for Leonard Nimoy, who played
Spock in Star Trek, is longer than the entry for Nobel
laureate Toni Morrison. The other major criticism is that
Wikipedia is inaccurate, which would make sense since there
are no credentials required for writers. However, a study
published in Nature compared the accuracy of Wikipedia to the
online version of Encyclopedia Britannica, and was surprised
to find that the accuracy was comparable — on average, about
three errors per Britannica item and about four errors per
Wikipedia item.
Wikipedia
itself is open about its own shortcomings. On its
"Researching with Wikipedia" page, it says: "Wikipedia's
most dramatic weaknesses are closely associated with its
greatest strengths. Wikipedia's radical openness means that
any given article may be, at any given moment, in a bad state:
for example, it could be in the middle of a large edit or it
could have been recently vandalized. While blatant vandalism
is usually easily spotted and rapidly corrected, Wikipedia is
certainly more subject to subtle vandalism and deliberate
factual errors than a typical reference work. Also, much as
Wikipedia can rapidly produce articles on timely topics, it is
also subject to remarkable oversights and omissions."
Other weaknesses, it says, are that articles may be incomplete
and that not all contributors cite their sources. Their
suggestion is just to do more research: "Keep in mind
that an encyclopedia is intended to be a starting point for
serious research, not an endpoint. Though many casual
inquiries will be satisfied merely by referring to Wikipedia,
you will learn more by accessing the print and online
resources we reference."
In
2009, an Irish student named Shane Fitzgerald was doing
research on the Internet's relationship to globalization. He
saw on TV that the French composer Maurice Jarre had died, and
he decided it was the perfect opportunity for an experiment.
Within 15 minutes, he made up a quote and posted it on
Wikipedia's Maurice Jarre page, claiming that the composer had
said: "One could say my life itself has been one long
soundtrack. Music was my life, music brought me to life, and
music is how I will be remembered long after I leave this
life. When I die there will be a final waltz playing in my
head that only I can hear." Shawn Fitzgerald didn't even
provide a fake citation for the quote — he just left it
without a citation.
Newspapers
had just one day to write an obituary for Jarre, and sure
enough, several papers and blogs picked up the fake quote for
their obituaries — including The Guardian, one of
Britain
's most respected newspapers.
Wikipedia actually managed to identify the quote as
suspicious. It was deleted after Fitzgerald put it up, and
when he reposted it, it was deleted in just six minutes. After
he reposted it again, it was left up for about a day, and then
deleted again. But it was up long enough to make its way into
obituaries, and Fitzgerald had to e-mail media outlets and
tell them that the quote was fake — he said that otherwise
they probably never would have noticed. Only The Guardian
publicly admitted its mistake — others just deleted the
quote from their obituary. The editor of The Guardian wrote:
"The moral of this story is not that journalists should
avoid Wikipedia, but that they shouldn't use information they
find there if it can't be traced back to a reliable primary
source." Maybe most of all, the story shows how freely
people turn to Wikipedia as a news source. In 2007, The New
York Times reported that since 2004, more than a hundred
judicial rulings in this country relied on evidence from
Wikipedia. Some of the instances where Wikipedia was used in
court included a definition of the Jewish marriage ceremony in
a
Brooklyn Surrogate Court
, an explanation of
"jungle juice" for the Supreme Court of Iowa, and an
entry on the Department of Homeland Security's threat levels
for a case involving antiwar protestors in
Georgia
's 11th Circuit Court of
Appeals.
-- The Writer's Almanac
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