A full reference would be to Veterans of the First World War who died in 2005, Veterans of the First World War who died in 2006, and Surviving veterans of World War I
'Wikipedia, "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit" seemed like such a good idea. Indeed, it still is a good idea – and a hugely valuable resource for countless kinds of information. I use it nearly every day. But rumblings from both inside and outside the project suggest that the encyclopedia that aimed to capture "the sum of human knowledge" may be past its peak.'
Editorial's closing paragraph: "If we can harness our collective wisdom the way Wikipedia has, the potential for unleashing human creativity is enormous. Instead of a camel, we just might create a unicorn."
Relating to an edit war at Toronto Port Authority: "The editors of Wikipedia need to take a hard look at their standards of 'verifiability' in the face of such an outlandish falsehood."
Dibbell berates "the Wikipedian hive-mind" for the treatment of the Wikitruth article. In his piece, posted online on May 2, he doesn't disclose that the AfD ended on April 20 with a decision to keep the Wikitruth article. (In the printed Village Voice: issue of May 3-9, 2006, page 26.)
"Online encyclopedia Wikipedia can be edited by anyone. It's a wealth of knowledge on a broad range of topics. Did we mention that anyone can edit it? As Victorian Liberal leader Robert Doyle was resigning in favour of Ted Baillieu, his online entry was being updated in a manner that would have stretched Encyclopedia Britannica's standards of objectivity. Until he "nobly" resigned, he served Victoria with "aplomb, charisma and energy", the page said. "More leaders like Mr Doyle are required to rail against the spin and economic mismanagement of the Bracks Government." Hey, they make a point. Then again, the person writing it is spinning an online encyclopedia entry. The effusiveness has since been deleted, but the mind whirls."
Weiner, Tim. "Langley, We Have a Problem", New York Times, Sunday, May 14, 2006; Section 4, 'Week in Review', p. 1. -- An article on the decline of the CIA.
"The big picture has been bumped by spot news. ... Drowned by demands from the White House and the Pentagon for instant information, 'intelligence analysts wind up being the Wikipedia of Washington,' John McLaughlin, the deputy director and acting director of central intelligence from October 2000 to September 2004, said in a interview."
Kidman, Angus. "The Wikipedia phenomenon", Australian Netguide issue 97 (June 2006), pub. 17 May 2006.
(No copy of the text online, but info-en got an email telling us it was quite a good article...)
KL Stout: "Over the years, Linux has spawned other open technologies and even an open source spirit or open source philosophy. It has engendered stuff like Wikipedia, the online open source encyclopedia or even, some could argue, citizen journalism."
He's in control of the world's largest encyclopedia, with 3.8 million articles. Does Wikipedia's uncontested ruler have too much power? In 2001 Jimmy Wales founded Wikipedia, an encyclopedia where all content is written and edited by the users themselves. The web site now contains millions of articles in about 200 different languages, among them Norwegian. (translation)
Smith, Rupert (30 May 2006). "Last night's TV". The Guardian. London.
As an object lesson in how not to do quest documentaries, look no further than the archly titled Richard Hammond and the Holy Grail (BBC1). Who is Richard Hammond? A quick look on Wikipedia tells me that he is a presenter of Top Gear. Another quick look on Wikipedia tells me that the legend of the Holy Grail was largely founded by Chrétien de Troyes in his 12th-century Perceval, le Conte du Graal. That a more modern myth has grown up around the misconstruction of "san greal" and "sang real". That Dan Brown has written a book called The Da Vinci Code, and that there are some harmless buffoons who believe that it's all something to do with Glastonbury. It took Richard Hammond two weeks of licence-funded travel, and an hour of screen time, to come to much the same conclusion.
Referring to Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable and The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable: "Both are more pleasant to use than Google or Wikipedia": Notable because this mention is made in passing and in a very conservative literary journal. The editor clearly felt no need to explain Wikipedia.
"I first heard about Wikipedia while reading Thomas Friedman's book, The World is Flat. In the book, he describes the encyclopedia project as a positive contribution to the Web."
"Robert McHenry, a former editor-in-chief of Encyclopaedia Britannica, has described Wikipedia as "a game without consequences". But as Skip begins to guide me through the arcane and often Kafkaesque bureaucracy of Wikipedia, vandalism starts to seem the least of its problems."
"The experience of Wikipedia has made it clear that having authoritative experts write this stuff is well worth doing, but I do think the Wiki concept appeals to people and there is a place for it."
"Thus was introduced into the American political lexicon the term Sister Souljah moment, defined by the by-no-means-authoritative Wikipedia.org as 'a politician's public repudiation of an allegedly extremist person, statement, or position perceived to have some association with the politician. Whether sincere or not, such an act of repudiation can appeal to centrist voters at the risk of alienating some of the politician's allies.'"
"But beyond the world of reference works, Wikipedia has become a symbol of the potential of the Web."
See also the associated list of protected and semi-protected articles: "Trouble Spots"
A correction was issued June 21, 2006 that the article "referred imprecisely" to Wikipedia policy. Note also that this link allows you to the view the NYT article without registering.
Details the Wikipedia articles which have a recent history of vandalisation and the means utilized to deal with this. Alison Wheeler and Jimmy Wales are quoted in the article.
"Six cardinal (and, in the long-term, deadly) sins plague this online venture. What unites and underlies all its deficiencies is simple: Wikipedia dissembles about what it is and how it operates. It is a self-righteous confabulation and its success in deceiving the many attests not only to the gullibility of the vast majority of Netizens but to the PR savvy of its sleek and slick operators."
"Traditional encyclopedias contain a body of knowledge dictated by a limited pool of experts. Wikipedia takes the position that the general public, as a whole, has a vaster amount of knowledge than any small group of experts, no matter how skilled they are, so the website gives Internet users an opportunity to share their own expertise, determine what knowledge gets included and contribute to the production of a new encyclopedia."
"But I believe that the new mode of text embodied by Wikipedia can teach new generations about the responsibilities of social collaboration, the act of critical reading (applied even to Reference materials), and the permanently unfinished state of human knowledge."
"Do we dismiss Wikipedia as a dubious hodgepodge of hearsay, or embrace it in a way that makes it educationally relevant? It’s far from perfect, no doubt, but does that mean it has no educational value? Can a resource that struggles with reliability serve a valid educational purpose? What do you think?"
July
Kruglinski, Susan (July 2006). "Map Evolution Evolving: How a controversial entry in Wikipedia has changed over time". Discover. p. 21.
"The entry for evolution on Wikipedia, the Internet encyclopedia that anyone can edit, was altered 2,081 times by 68 editors between December 2001 and last October. IBM's Watson Research Center produced this image, which tracks the transformation. Each vertical line is a new version; each color is a different editor."
"San Jose Mayor Ron Gonzales' legal troubles have been added to his online profile on Wikipedia, the guest-edited and controversial Internet encyclopedia."
"Wikipedia doesn't like Sam Vaknin, and the feelings are mutual. Look up this narcissm aficionado on Wikipedia and you'll find he's been dutifully erased from the wiki-consciousness, a name that shall not be uttered, or "recreated without a good reason."
"Sam Vaknin wrote the article "The Six Sins of the Wikipedia" for American Chronicle on July 2, 2006. In it he decries our site with the now all too familiar catch-cry that Wikipedia must be about to implode and die because it is Just Too Unworkable. I do seem to remember people saying this about a year ago..."
Dan Fost writes on BarCamp's AFD. "...So it's hard to fathom, but some folks want to remove the BarCamp entry from Wikipedia...(I actually found it when I was looking up BarCamp, and I weighed in, saying that I found the page useful, and if there was a competing point of view, my understanding of Wikipedia was that the page should incorporate that.)"
Hugh Linehan writes of the recent edit war over whether to state that Ireland is part of the British Isles, or state that there are some disputes over what the term covers. ". . . there's no such thing as value-neutral information, and it can be fascinating to observe how entries [in Wikipedia] are amended, annotated, argued over and extended by different factions. Controversy is currently raging over the entry for 'The British Isles'" (url stated in the article).
(Title in English means: President is like mullah) Discuss English Wikipedia article on Lech Kaczyński, Polish president, mostly attention given to so called "potatoe war".
Ben generally criticises Wikipedia, and writes "The phenomenal but unreliable online encyclopedia is best used with a healthy dose of scepticism". Uses the Ken Lay story above as proof.
"PRD bases challenge on Stalin and... Wikipedia." Front-page lead story (PDF of p.1) in right-wing Mexico City daily, accuses PRD of C&P-ing text from es:wikipedia in its legal challenge to the presidential election.
Officials at Skutt Catholic High School have filed a lawsuit in Douglas County District Court in order to determine the IPs of two individuals who vandalized the school's Wikipedia article in May and June 2006.
A thorough review of the history and practice of Wikipedia. History of encyclopaedias. Quotes from Jimbo, Essjay, William Connolley, etc. Ends "Wikipedia offers endless opportunities for self-expression. It is the love child of reading groups and chat rooms, a second home for anyone who has written an Amazon review. This is not the first time that encyclopedia-makers have snatched control from an élite, or cast a harsh light on certitude. Jimmy Wales may or may not be the new Henry Ford, yet he has sent us tooling down the interstate, with but a squint back at the railroad. We’re on the open road now, without conductors and timetables. We’re free to chart our own course, also free to get gloriously, recklessly lost. Your truth or mine? "
The author describes his internal moral fight about vandalising a Wikipedia article. "As a free fount of altruistically supplied information, the ever-growing online encyclopedia is a researcher's boon and a model for aggregating the collective knowledge of the human species. So how come all I want to do is vandalize it? "
A satirical take on Wikipedia's susceptibility to falsifications and vandalism. "Wikipedia, the online, reader-edited encyclopedia, honored the 750th anniversary of American independence on July 25 with a special featured section on its main page Tuesday."
"A high school in Nebraska, USA is suing over entries posted on Wikipedia - the website that "anyone can edit" that's popular with teenagers and the unemployed. Wikipedia itself isn't the target of the lawsuit from Skutt High School, nor are many of the sites that legally or illegally scrape Wikipedia's content."
The daily newspaper of Akron, Ohio looked at Wikipdia articles on regional topics and spoke with contributors from Ohio. "The lure has been irresistible for many Akron-area residents, who pour their expertise on hobbies, current events and local history into Wikipedia's growing database."
Motoring journalist Jeremy Clarkson writes in his trademark flippant, hyperbolic style about the unreliability of Wikipedia as a research tool. He bases his conclusion on his reading of the article about himself, its variance from his perception of its subject, and a similar comparison regarding the Toyota Prius. He also rehearses the argument that articles may contain nonsense because anyone can edit Wikipedia.
CTV News and the Canadian Press both cite a Wikipedia article as "arguably a better gauge of how the race is going" then any other information available. [10]
Author Marshall Poe answers interview questions from Jennie Rothenberg of the Atlantic about his impressions of Wikipedia and sources for his September article entitled The Hive.
"Who would have thought an encyclopaedia could be so addictive? For the fans who write and update Wikipedia, the free online research tool, it takes only hours to get hooked. Now they just need to work out how to beat the vandals."
Error: "The key rules include that the information should contain original research"
They said they had made a printed correction, and would fix the online version soon. 21:26, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
Online version still has not been fixed. 02:53, 30 March 2007 (UTC)
"Quality and accuracy are respected, but breadth of selection, fast updates and free access give Wikipedia an advantage."
Naughton, John (August 13, 2006). "Websites that changed the world". The Observer. London. The ranking is of sites since the start of the WorldWideWeb. Wikipedia is rated second, behind eBay and ahead of Google. The citation notes the Seigenthaler problem, but discounts it.
"In the last six months, the quality of the information at Wikipedia has vastly increased to the point where it is one of the best sources in the world for many topics." The author goes on to describe how he has made edits to Wikipedia's money article and encourages readers to improve other articles.
In a political weekly from the Czech Republic author Martin Uhlíř tries to cover history and principles of Wikipedia on one page of A3 format. The fact that Wikipedia did not collaps into chaos is explained by analogy with ant colony.
After a reader uses Wikipedia to point out that columnist Dan Savage has been misrepresenting his age, Savage gives an explanation, ending "damn you, Wikipedia!"
Gomes, Lee (2006-08-23). "Success and Greed In the New Economy Of Web Point Payouts". Wall Street Journal. Just a mention, quoted below:
"Wikipedia, for instance, gives its editors points for making edits to entries. But one result of that is said to be editors making potentially unnecessary minor changes to articles to drive their ratings."
Sent to the Comm. Com as an error - We don't give editors "points"!
"But now there are suggestions that a new architecture of control will be introduced for Wikipedia as a whole, if it proves successful when it is applied to the German-language site next month, and this could have far wider implications."
Discusses the Swahili and Bambara Wikipedias, as they came up at Wikimania 2006, in light of the goal of providing an encyclopedia in every major living language.
Discussing Emmalina, a YouTube star who quit after online harassment: "The chatty video blog entries recorded from her bedroom first began to appear in the "most viewed" rankings on the popular YouTube video in June and some of her more controversial posts attracted more than 300,000 views. Emmalina even has her own Wikipedia entry."
Author Marshall Poe writes an at-length article about the early history of Wikipedia, fundamental conflicts, and his personal experience about surviving a article for deletion. "Bear in mind that I knew none of these people, and they had, as far as I know, no interest other than truth in doing all of this work....Now that’s wiki magic."
Author David Martin parodies Wikipedia with a mock-biography written about himself from the point of view of his wife, if they were to divorce. "Here's how my entry might end up if my wife ever divorces me and becomes a registered user...."
As part of The Observers Internet freedom campaign known as Irrepressible.info, this article interviews Jimbo Wales on why he won't compromise on China's censorship of Wikipedia and he criticises Google, Microsoft and Yahoo for doing so.
"September 11, 2001 attacks — Wikipedia entry: Though I’ve had plenty of reasons to shun Wikipedia and its attempts at a neutral point of view, I’ll give it credit for this entry, which covers a vast array of details about the attacks. There are simple timelines, photos, and the entry even includes some of the conspiracy theories in a relatively balanced way."
Points out that Wikipedia entries on top brands now repeatedly make the top 10 results in major search engines. "In all seriousness, as soon as brand managers learn where they stand on Wikipedia, there is a natural inclination to want to control it."... "and this community can and will sniff out corporate manipulation of entries."
"Shi Zhao slides the computer mouse, making rapid-fire clicks and in the space of a minute or so finds about a dozen minor errors to be tweaked on Wikipedia, the popular online encyclopedia that anyone can edit... Shi's feat is even greater given that technically, he should not have access to the site. Last October, the Chinese government blocked access to Wikipedia, which has more than 5 million articles in 229 languages."
Author, who is a professor at Harvard Medical School, writes about researching a jellyfish sting remedy: "[A] study published in February in The Medical Journal of Australia.... had conducted a clinical trial that randomly assigned sting victims to application of hot water (to deactivate the poison) or icepacks. The trial was stopped halfway through because the hot-water group did so much better that it would have been unethical to continue. I didn’t discover this through any proprietary medical search engines. I used Google and Wikipedia, and it took about two minutes."
Access note: Login required. You can use "wikipedia1" as both the username and password.
Author, a major Iowa newspaper staff writer, looks at how the state of Iowa is covered in Wikipedia and is not impressed. (The article says to "just Wikipedia your town", thus making "Wikipedia" into a verb in the same way as "Google" has been used.)
On the launch of Citizendium. "Of course, Wikipedia could start requiring registration and having disputes settled by experts - just like Citizendium. Or it could simply take content from Citizendium, if that has already done the job."
Parmenter is one of the authors of the Newton entry that appears on Wikipedia, a collaborative online encyclopedia, adding his contributions over the last three years as a hobby.
Finkelstein charts the history of his objection to his article, an "attractive nuisance", and outlines some of the problems people in public life have had with their Wikipedia biographies.
Unto Hämäläinen (September 30, 2006). "Aukotonta tietoa (Knowledge without holes)". Helsingin Sanomat monthly supplement.
Hämäläinen organises a meeting between a number of established editors in the Finnish Wikipedia, to discuss how Wikipedia works and what they think of it. Many of them meet each other in real life for the first time.
"Why Triple play? Because I have three News and Comments in one post. All about Wikipedia. Search Engine Optimization and Wikipedia, a love-hate relationship. Wikipedia Pages Rank well, very well."
The author describes his high regard for Wikipedia and how he has added to its content on Filipino topics. He has challenged some facts but not always successfully.
The author decries the lack of coverage in Wikipedia of prominent Australian writers. "Back to those Google search results: the first listing for "Australian literature" is a privately run index. The second is Ozlit, a well-meaning Victorian site where some pages were last updated in 1999; third is a National Library of Australia literature index. The "official" authority on Australian literature, AustLit, comes in fourth. AustLit is comprehensive, well edited and accurate. It's also unavailable to the average user, limited as it is to subscribers or members of organisations that subscribe (including university students). Wikipedia's readers are everyone else -- the world, basically. And what we're showing them is a mess. "
Reports findings by the Internet usage analysts Hitwise's Heather Hopkins of where surfers go after they read a Wikipedia article. "Hopkins begins by mentioning that Wikipedia receives over half (54%) of its traffic from Google...". "Most Wikipedia users leave the site and go directly to computer and Internet-centered sites like search engines, social networks and chat. One might assume to either look up more information, post what was found on a profile or blog, or to discuss what they've just learned at Wikipedia. "
In a Question and Answer piece, the reliability of Wikipedia and the proposed Citizendium project are debated. "Mind you, I got that fact off Wikipedia, so you can't be sure. Any new version might be an improvement. But it could also be a lot more boring."
Prompted by the research by Heather Hopkins of Hitwise, Vakin concludes that Google's reliance on a few internet neighborhoods is slanting its search results towards Wikipedia even where the article concerned is a 2 sentence stub. "I have been monitoring 154 keywords on Google since 1999. Of these, the number one (#1) search result in 128 keywords is now a Wikipedia article."... ..."Wikipedia, the "encyclopedia" whose "editors" are mostly unqualified teenagers and young adults is touted by Google as an authoritative source of information."... ..."MySpace whose 110 million users are predominantly prepubescent and adolescents now dictates what Websites will occupy the first search results in Google's search results."
Reports on the distrust of Wikipedia in Higher Education circles. It also describes the efforts of academic Alexander Halavais to place factual errors on Wikipedia as User:AlHalawi.
"Wikipedia, the online encyclopaedia that anyone can write and edit, is one of the unlikeliest success stories of the cyber age. Mick Brown tracks down its founder in Florida – and talks to the Wikipedians who keep the site alive"
Halloween spoof article in which Jimbo Wales is burnt at the stake for starting "Wicca-pedia". Quotation: "the girls weren’t investigating occult material, but rather searching for the astrological sign of Fez from 'That 70’s Show'".
BBC News: Virus creators target Wikipedia 6 November 2006. The article has a story on how virus creators added a link to the German Wikipedia which infected users with a new variant of the Blaster worm. The article was quickly identified and the current page and its archives were deleted.
Article on Noah Webster concludes with a mention of the Wiktionary.
The Crawley Observer: The World Famous Councillor, 15 November2006. Reports how a Conservative local councillor was embarrassed to find that 40 minutes after he had complained in his blog that nobody knew who he was, someone had created an article on Wikipedia about his plans for world domination. (Adam G Brown has since been deleted as a hoax).
Reports a boom in use on the Chinese Wikipedia. Since the lifting of the Chinese government's block on Wikipedia,..." the number of new users registering to contribute to the site has exceeded 1,200 a day, up from an average of 300 to 400 prior to the unblocking. The number of new articles posted daily has increased 75% from the week before."
Ann Kirschner (apparently User:Drann), "Adventures in the Land of Wikipedia", Chronicle of Higher Education17 November2006. Focuses on creation and expansion of article on Ala Gertner. "For now, Wikipedia works. I can hardly wait to start another entry drawn from my research. After my experience receiving an excellent assist from this anonymous knowledge army, I'm prepared to believe that Wikipedia's millions of eyes will continue its evolution and improve its quality."
Wiki wars by Joey Kurtzmann in online Jewish magazine Jewcy.com. It's over-the-top positive, basically says Wikipedia will save the world. It says Wikipedia creates an environment in which groups with different historical narratives are forced to hash things out, and provides a model for dealing with disagreements over history. And it compliments Wikipedia's coverage of the Middle East (although it says that the Lavon affair article, while evenhanded, "makes for frustrating reading" because it is not well-organized).
"I heart people making negative comments about the article over and over again, but none of the people that complained actually went over to Wikipedia and clicked "EDIT" to fix, change or add what they believed to be so bad about the article."
In Tokyo's Asahi Shimbun edition, at least, Page 1 and above the fold. A comparison of the English-language and Chinese-language Wikipedias: "On sensitive questions of China's modern history or on hot-button issues," writes French, "the Chinese version diverges so dramatically from its English counterpart that it sometimes reads as if it were approved by the censors themselves." (Also in the New York Times: [11])
Author discusses the Wikipedia Articles for Deletion process, with comments from "Tim the Mute" of Canadian "mind blowing thrash folk" band "The Shiny Diamonds" (deleted), and Jimbo Wales.
Long magazine article discusses attempts to integrate various US intelligence agencies' information using the Wikipedia model, blogging, and Wikimedia software.
Reaction to the Washington Post piece on Articles for deletion. "I've added my share of skepticism and distrust, but I'd be less than candid if I didn't acknowledge that I use Wikipedia in my work on a fairly regular (if guarded) basis. Put me down for some appreciation, too."
In a 50-minute documentary on the history of the www and how it is changing western civilization, a seven minute segment on Wikipedia as a tool to share knowledge and information featured comments by Jimbo Wales, Clay Shirky, Dr David Weinberger (Harvard University), Prof. Harry Jenkins (MIT), and Ewan MacDonald - author of the millionth article on English Wikipedia (interviewed at Jordanhill railway station).
No doubt we can thank the cereal box, where at least you had somebody from Kellogg's (Weetabix, whoever) keeping things straight, in contrast to, say, Wikipedia, which is more the million-monkeys-with-a-million-keyboards approach.
Reports professor Eric Goldman of the Santa Clara University School of Law who argues that Wikipedia will see increasingly vigorous efforts to subvert its editorial process as marketers become more determined and turn to automated tools to alter Wikipedia entries. Goldman predicts Wikipedians will burn out trying to keep entries clean within 4 years.
Reports "Jimmy Wales has said his company Wikia.com will offer software, storage and network access and that website creators can keep advertising revenue." Shows a thumb of Wikipedia's portal page as an example of the success of Wikis and links to Wikipedia.
Reports the uncensoring of the English Wikipedia in China whilst the Chinese version remains blocked. Quotes praise from Reporters Without Borders for Wikipedia handling of the situation.
Reports Jonathan Carson, CEO of , Nielsen BuzzMetrics which researches internet trends, as saying, "Blog references to Wikipedia now eclipse virtually every other encyclopedia brand, and Wikipedia outranks mentions of the term "encyclopedia" by a 6-to-1 margin. Wikipedia today is mentioned 28% more than the standalone term wiki."
"The growing frequency of the word 'Wikipedia' versus 'encyclopedia' also underscores the ubiquity and utility of the brand, not unlike other brands that often represent their categories, such as Xerox, Kleenex, Google and iPod," .
Latest update on the back and forth censorship of China and wikipedia. On the differences betweeen the Chinese and English Wikipedias - "It seems like enough Chinese patriates are doing a good job in using Wikipedia’s own rules to “rewrite” their own history."
Reports the coverage of the sport of curling on Wikipedia and calls on curlers to contribute to Wikipedia to expand coverage. Discusses the article of curling itself, as well as many of the athletes who have articles, and discusses how 2-time world champion Ed Werenich should have an article and what it should mention.
"Simon Pulsifer has become a poster boy for a revolution. The 25-year-old Ottawa resident never envisioned this turn of events. He just wanted to conquer a smaller world defined by lists ranking the top contributors to online encyclopedia Wikipedia. It was an accomplishment he never imagined would merit praise beyond a small corner of the cyberspace universe."
Reports the launch of Scholarpedia, another competitor to Wikipedia. "Unlike Wikipedia, each article in Scholarpedia has an expert editor attached to it as a "curator," who approves all changes and ensures the article is an approved version. And it is not as elitist as Citizendium. Anyone can suggest changes to an article, and there's an anonymous forum for initial peer review."
Reports on vandalism by Fark.com members to Snohomish High School as retaliation for community's reported efforts to intimidate student severely injured when blasting traditional cannon at football games. Has an excerpt from, and link to, the offending edit.
"As the Naked Cowboy, Mr. Burck seems to be assured of a permanent place in the Wikipedia firmament, given the sheer volume of his odd fame. Wikipedia's methodology reflects the nature of modern celebrity, which is often based not on achievement, but sheer ubiquity. Entries are controlled by the volunteer contributors (or Wikipedians), who use a combination of old-fashioned scholarship and Google-age computer algorithms to decide who will stay, and who will not. Unlike traditional encyclopedias, Wikipedia is live and dynamic -- entries can be altered at any time. The cyber-debate over Mr. Zancai drew both praise and condemnation."
The leading British arts' journalist speculates on the new 10 volume Encyclopedia of Popular Music,[12] edited by Colin Larkin, being the last hard-copy work of its kind with the development of online rivals, such as Wikipedia, being seen as direct competitors. Apart from the usual comments regarding this project's reliabilty, Lebrecht finds the limitation on editor's stating personal opinions, for him a means of discerninjg relative value in creative works and artistic figures, to be a fatal flaw, a "demotic uselessness of the wikis".
Antone Gonsalves (2006-12-26). "Wikipedia Founder Plans Search Engine". InformationWeek. CMP. Retrieved 2006-12-27. InformationWeek cites Jimmy Wales describing a new search engine code-named Wikiasari which would combine open source technology and human intervention to deliver more relevant results than the algorithm-based systems used today. The engine would compete with Google and Yahoo.
"The Article to affiliate marketing at Wikipedia was today "semi-protected". You might noticed the template that indicates the protection on other articles at Wikipedia already. If you did not, let me explain what it means and why it was done."