wikipedia

richardcadler's picture

A quick guide to Wikipedia's editing structure

An article about Wikipedia and the death of the expert, blah, blah, blah, whatever.

The real value of this article is that it has links for the various levels of curation currently holding sway at Wikipedia. The links are to the groups' own descriptions in Wikipedia, but this puts them all in one place.

You guys might know this stuff already, but I thought it might be useful as a reference.

richardcadler's picture

Visualizing deletion discussions in Wikipedia

"As Doc Searls recently put it, Wikipedia is, like the protocols of the Net, "a set of agreements". A Web protocol defines the way in which computers communicate with each other and make decisions to ensure successful transactions. Wikipedia policies have the same purpose, but instead of transactions between machines, they regulate human decisions. An important part of these decisions bear on what topics are suitable for inclusion in Wikipedia and what topics are not.

richardcadler's picture

Study: Wikipedia actually pretty accurate (so calm down)

"The study, carried out by researchers at Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, says that the site is about as accurate as any published article you find in a peer-reviewed journal. The study specifically looked at Wikipedia pages on about cancer. The information turned out to be totally accurate, if only a little difficult to read. USA Today’s editors aren’t in charge of the site: the Wikipedia articles were said to be at a college-level reading level rather than a 9th grade reading level (found on PDQ, a professionally peer-reviewed Web site)."

Sam Rose's picture

Electrical discharge machining - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Electric discharge machining (EDM), sometimes colloquially also referred to as spark machining, spark eroding, burning, die sinking or wire erosion,[1] is a manufacturing process whereby a desired shape is obtained using electrical discharges (sparks). Material is removed from the workpiece by a series of rapidly recurring current discharges between two electrodes, separated by a dielectric liquid and subject to an electric voltage. One of the electrodes is called the tool-electrode, or simply the ‘tool’ or ‘electrode’, while the other is called the workpiece-electrode, or ‘workpiece’.

richardcadler's picture

Student's Wikipedia hoax dupes newspapers: report

So after years of excoriating Wikipedia as untrustworthy, we get:

An Irish student's fake quote on the Wikipedia online encyclopaedia has been used in newspaper obituaries around the world, the Irish Times reported on Wednesday....

Shane Fitzgerald, 22, a final-year student studying sociology and economics at University College Dublin, told the newspaper he placed the quote on the website as an experiment when doing research on globalisation....

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