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Ken Lay Dead; Wikipedia Confused
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ramoth
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 03:29 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 12:29 PM #1 of 55
Ken Lay Dead; Wikipedia Confused

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...070501068.html

Quote:
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The death of former Enron Corp. chief Ken Lay on Wednesday underscored the challenges facing online encyclopedia Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org/), which as the news was breaking offered a variety of causes for his death.

Lay, 64, died of a heart attack early on Wednesday, a family spokeswoman said, just six weeks after a jury found him guilty of fraud in one of the biggest corporate scandals in U.S. history.

Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia that anyone can edit, added news of Lay's death to his online biography shortly after news outlets began reporting it at around 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT).

At 10:06 a.m., Wikipedia's entry for Lay said he died "of an apparent suicide."

At 10:08, it said he died at his Aspen, Colorado home "of an apparent [[heart attack] or suicide.]."

Within the same minute, it said the cause of death was "yet to be determined."

At 10:09 a.m., it said "no further details have been officially released" about the death.

Two minutes later, it said: "The guilt of ruining so many lives finally [sic] led him to his suicide."

At 10.12 a.m., this was replaced by: "According to Lay's pastor the cause was a 'massive coronary' heart attack."

By 10:39 a.m., Lay's entry said: "Speculation as to the cause of the heart attack lead many people to believe it was due to the amount of stress put on him by the Enron trial." This statement was later dropped.

By early Wednesday afternoon, the entry said Lay was pronounced dead at Aspen Valley Hospital, citing the Pitkin, Colorado sheriff's department. It said he apparently died of a massive heart attack, citing KHOU-TV in Houston.

Officials at Wikipedia did not immediately return phone and e-mail requests for comment. Its Web site warns users that "newer articles may still contain significant misinformation, unencyclopedic content, or vandalism." Wikipedia says it has 13,000 active writers and editors.

Lay and Jeffrey Skilling, who replaced him as chief executive, were convicted for their roles in Enron's 2001 collapse. Both were awaiting sentencing and faced long prison terms.
Compare this article to the speech given by Jason Scott at Notacon back in April.

Ken Lay's death really isn't the issue I'd like to see discussed (although feel free to discuss it).-- Wikipedia is.

Jam it back in, in the dark.
Kalekkan
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 03:53 PM #2 of 55
Wikipedia really isn't great as a source. While often it's very reliable, there's always that chance that the most recently edited item you are reading is inaccurate or incorrect. Still it's a great way of generally gaining some knowledge of things and it does have some nice information organization that is convenient. Now I've never personally used the editing feature but I think what they need is perhaps a sort of accountability loophole. For instance, require users to put in credit card information (for authentication purposes) when they create an account. This way if someone is an abusive editor, they can be banned not by their wiki account username, not by their ip address, but by their actually identity.

As for the death of Ken Lay, it was somewhat difficult to find out today in regards to what happened, which could be why the wiki post was being changed so much. The media itself was struggling on a real answer which would make the entry at 10:09 essentially correct. However I think all of the entrires are wrong. I personally believe that Ken Lay was killed by ninjas.

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Kaleb.G
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 03:56 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 12:56 PM #3 of 55
This is the same as any big news story. It breaks, people go crazy adding it to Wikipedia without checking all of the proper sources and facts, and then the article gets the lockdown within a few hours so all of the info can be straightened out. Really, Wikipedia isn't the best place to get perfectly accurate news on the minute it happens, but it gets tidied up fairly quick.

This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
Free.User
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 04:02 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 01:02 PM #4 of 55
In before LeHah.

I don't understand how/why someone would excpect to find correct information on wikipedia (or any freely-edited source) on an event that happened less than a week ago. Are people upset by the sudden changes that are taking place in new articles, and do they believe that such a source has a resonsibility to have 100% correct info the minute it is up? If I was looking for a source that I know is going to be accurate, I'd check out a national news program. Anyone who is annoyed by Wikipedia's innacuracies has nothing to complain about.

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Amanda
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 04:23 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 06:53 PM #5 of 55
Aw, Kaleb said pretty much was I was going to say.

Watch the news while a "breaking story" is happening, and you'll basically see this exact same phenomenon. Every tiny bit of here-say and rumour that makes its way into the newsroom seems to get on the air, if only to be corrected as soon as the NEXT rumour comes along. If people don't bitch about it when "real" TV, newspaper, internet, or radio news sources are doing it, why is it an issue that it happens on Wikipedia? Hell, conflicting stories from major news sources is likely a big part of the REASON this happens on Wikipedia. Before anyone launches into the "OMG WIKIPEDIA SUCKS" speech, consider how rarely ACTUAL news sources live up to those standards of accuracy in reporting breaking news before they get the facts straight.

Wikipedia = open info database to which anyone can contribute and edit. Wikipedia ≠ news site. Give breaking news time to becoming old news and the entries tend to get tidied into something approachably accurate.

I was speaking idiomatically.

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ramoth
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 04:30 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 01:30 PM #6 of 55
Originally Posted by Kalekkan
For instance, require users to put in credit card information (for authentication purposes) when they create an account. This way if someone is an abusive editor, they can be banned not by their wiki account username, not by their ip address, but by their actually identity.
Do the words "identity theft" and "credit card fraud" mean anything to you?



Wikipedia is not a news site? O RLY?

Seriously, read the speech I linked. I think it will elucidate a lot of this. Especially the problems in calling it an "encyclopedia" and trying to make it "the compendium of all human knowledge". As Mr. Scott says, it would be one thing if the site was called "Jimbo's Big Bag o' Trivia." But it's not.

What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?
Monkey King
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 04:35 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 03:35 PM #7 of 55
There have been a number of articles on how horrible some of Wikipedia's entries are, simply because of all the groupthink that goes into them. Wikipedia's strength is that anybody can contribute to the articles, but unfortunately their greatest liability is that anybody can contribute to Wikipedia.

This really doesn't strike me as news, as I thought it was well established that Wiki was good for little more than quick lookups of facts and random trivia. Hell, there's more effort put into articles for recaps of Power Rangers episodes than actual factual data. There's a disgusting amount of groupthink that permeates many articles, and people are constantly trying to push their own wierd agendas in various underhanded ways. Me, I have to ask when Wikipedia had any credibility to begin with.

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ramoth
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 04:43 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 01:43 PM #8 of 55
I don't really think it ever did. I remember two years ago or so before Wikipedia really became huge I went there and a lot of stuff was just plain wrong. And what wasn't was of dubious authenticity anyway.

I find articles that cite their sources are interesting, mostly as just a collection of links on the subject though.

The scary part is that some people actually think Wikipedia is a viable source for information and try to use it on papers. That makes me really afraid.

While I laud you for using the doublespeak-esque term groupthink, could you explain more what you mean by it, MK? I'm not entirely clear on how you're using it.

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Amanda
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 05:03 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 07:33 PM #9 of 55
Originally Posted by DATAGONK
Wikipedia is not a news site? O RLY?
Obviously it has entries on current events, and obviously pre-existing entries can get a bit hectic when the topic/person/event/whatever is suddenly a developing news story. But click on one, then scroll down and check the sources. It's mostly a collection of information gathered from major-and-minor news sources and often-recent articles (neither of which are ever consistant or infallible by any means). Wikipedia itself isn't reporting anything, and it tells you flat-out that information related to developing stories is subject to change. It's just a hub for people to cobble together the information gathered from the numerous sources out there. The current event entries are the same as anything else on Wikipedia: a generally good starting point (especially when a lot of cited sources are linked in the article so you can check them all out for yourself), but it shouldn't be the ONLY place you go to get your information.

There IS a sister-project wiki for news (though it seems to have much the same approach with stricter citation rules). But the article quoted in the first post was specifically targetting Wikipedia, not Wikinews.

Jam it back in, in the dark.

The closer you get to light, the greater your shadow becomes.

Last edited by Amanda; Jul 5, 2006 at 05:08 PM.
ramoth
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 05:10 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 02:10 PM #10 of 55
Looks like you obviously didn't click on my link, since I linked to Wikinews.

Also, Wikinews is run by the same people as Wikipedia. I don't see how it's any less relevant.

You make a good point about Wikipedia just being a bunch of links to other news sources. One of the three founding principles of Wikipedia is that original research does not belong on Wikipedia. That logically extends beyond scientific research to journalism as well.

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Amanda
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 05:43 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 08:13 PM #11 of 55
Originally Posted by DATAGONK
Looks like you obviously didn't click on my link, since I linked to Wikinews.

Also, Wikinews is run by the same people as Wikipedia. I don't see how it's any less relevant.
I did mouse-over the address to see where it led, but I guess my eyes deceived me and read "Wikipedia" instead of "Wikinews" in the URL. Ah well. Same point, anyway.

Even if Wikinews and Wikipedia are run by the same people, they're different projects with different goals. Though either way, I maintain that the original article is just complaining about nothing. Like I said, ACTUAL news sources mis-report and change their facts all the time, sometimes to the point of reporting things that are complete bunk. Yet no one ever seems to call them on it in the same way that they like to complain about Wikipedia and the like. At least Wikipedia has the excuse that it's publically edited.

Quote:
You make a good point about Wikipedia just being a bunch of links to other news sources. One of the three founding principles of Wikipedia is that original research does not belong on Wikipedia. That logically extends beyond scientific research to journalism as well.
That seems to be Wikipedia's main intention, yeah. It's not claiming to create anything, really. It's just a place where people can contribute information that's available to the public, and help to condense it into what (in a best-case scenario) will become both a more-or-less accurate overview of the topic and a decent list of cited sources.

This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.

The closer you get to light, the greater your shadow becomes.

Last edited by Amanda; Jul 5, 2006 at 05:45 PM.
RacinReaver
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Old Jul 5, 2006, 07:45 PM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 05:45 PM #12 of 55
Originally Posted by DATAGONK
While I laud you for using the doublespeak-esque term groupthink, could you explain more what you mean by it, MK? I'm not entirely clear on how you're using it.
Groupthink is a real thing that you'll see in psychology and management books. It's a phenomenon that occurs when someone doesn't want to speak up because they're afraid of the repercussions from the rest of the group. It's commonly cited as the cause of the Challenger disaster (the engineer specializing in the o-rings adamantly opposed the launch proceeding, but since he was pressured from his own company as well as those at NASA, he gave in to their demands even though it was against his better judgement).

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acid
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 12:17 AM Local time: Jul 5, 2006, 11:17 PM #13 of 55
Yes, Wikipedia is fallible. By it's very nature it's greatest strength is it's greatest weakness. However this just strengthens the idea that the system works.

Quote:
At 10:06 a.m., Wikipedia's entry for Lay said he died "of an apparent suicide."

At 10:08, it said he died at his Aspen, Colorado home "of an apparent [[heart attack] or suicide.]."

Within the same minute, it said the cause of death was "yet to be determined."

At 10:09 a.m., it said "no further details have been officially released" about the death.

Two minutes later, it said: "The guilt of ruining so many lives finally [sic] led him to his suicide."

At 10.12 a.m., this was replaced by: "According to Lay's pastor the cause was a 'massive coronary' heart attack."
Six minutes. It took six minutes from the time someone posted wrong information to the time that it was corrected. This does nothing but prove that the self-policing style of wikipedia does, infact, work. Had the information stayed up for weeks, I can see where there would be an issue. However it took less time to correct this, fairly major, news story than it would take me to make a sandwich.

I was speaking idiomatically.

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Last edited by acid; Jul 6, 2006 at 12:20 AM.
Gecko3
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 01:04 AM Local time: Jul 6, 2006, 01:04 AM #14 of 55
I browse wikipedia quite often, but just for fun, not for doing papers on, as my professors have told me (one of them quite hiliariously, after going there, and finding out that a student just copied/pasted the same thing in their research paper as the wiki article) that it's not a reliable source, which I have to agree with them on.

An example one of them gave was that the Kingdom of France didn't exist till about I think the 14th century (I forgot myself bleh), but some naysayers keep trying to change it so that wiki says it appeared in the 7th century (which he tells us legitimate historians say is false).

It can be good, but only if the people writing stuff on it are pretty knowledgable about the stuff they're writing on (and yes, linking to reliable sources also helps. I've noticed a lot of articles have lately been stuck with a "Citation needed" on their info, so that if someone knows where to find that info, hopefully they can fix that problem of finding where that info was originally from. Beats them just straight out plagarizing or pulling facts out of their butt).

I have to admit though, sometimes wikipedia has some interesting stuff that's probably more obscure from the regular internet, like mechs (and a brief history of them, as well as western vs. eastern mech designs), and some info on relatively minor figures in history/entertainment/etc (although it's far from complete).

But yeah, for stuff like that Ken Lay incident, I'd go to a more reliable source of information (such as a news media), although wiki does have some interesting, brief history info for the Enron scandal (and other corporate fraud stuff).

What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?
kapsi
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 03:13 AM Local time: Jul 6, 2006, 10:13 AM #15 of 55
Originally Posted by Gecko3
An example one of them gave was that the Kingdom of France didn't exist till about I think the 14th century (I forgot myself bleh), but some naysayers keep trying to change it so that wiki says it appeared in the 7th century (which he tells us legitimate historians say is false)
Where those naysayers come from? You're saying that "legitimate historians" can't be wrong?

How ya doing, buddy?
ramoth
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 03:32 AM Local time: Jul 6, 2006, 12:32 AM #16 of 55
Originally Posted by acid
Yes, Wikipedia is fallible. By it's very nature it's greatest strength is it's greatest weakness. However this just strengthens the idea that the system works.

Six minutes. It took six minutes from the time someone posted wrong information to the time that it was corrected. This does nothing but prove that the self-policing style of wikipedia does, infact, work. Had the information stayed up for weeks, I can see where there would be an issue. However it took less time to correct this, fairly major, news story than it would take me to make a sandwich.
And what if someone accessed that page during those six minutes, and didn't go back? They would come out with the wrong idea, perhaps even that he killed himself because he felt guilty. That's bad journalism.

The main point I think the original article was getting at is that in journalism, you are responsible to get the story right the first time so your readers don't get the wrong impression. Printing a lie about someone is called libel. It's a real crime. Look it up.

RacinReaver: Thanks. I've heard the term used before, but was never given a clear definition. The more you know.

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Klaus
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 05:55 AM #17 of 55
Wikipedia is in fact a great source of trivia but that's all. When I need to learn about something in general it's wonderful, but there's a lot of drama that goes on on the talk pages and some people generally are so stupid it bothers me that they in fact editing anything.

I commonly find that I wish it was a paysite because I'm of the belief that people wouldn't pay to damage pages, but then it would house considerably less information

Jam it back in, in the dark.
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 06:24 AM Local time: Jul 6, 2006, 12:24 PM #18 of 55
Originally Posted by Kaleb.G
Really, Wikipedia isn't the best place to get perfectly accurate news on the minute it happens
Uhh is it meant to? Wikipedia isn't a newspage, it's an online encyclopedia. Well, at least that's my understanding of it.

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Kalekkan
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 10:09 AM #19 of 55
Mistakes, miscommunication, and misinformation happen in journalism as well.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10682163/

The next link is ironic I know...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Sa...Media_coverage

Wiki's not really meant for breaking news stories. It's more of an information archive, and I mean archive in the sense of a place which historical documents are stored.

This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
acid
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Old Jul 6, 2006, 08:46 PM Local time: Jul 6, 2006, 07:46 PM #20 of 55
Originally Posted by DATAGONK
And what if someone accessed that page during those six minutes, and didn't go back? They would come out with the wrong idea, perhaps even that he killed himself because he felt guilty. That's bad journalism.

The main point I think the original article was getting at is that in journalism, you are responsible to get the story right the first time so your readers don't get the wrong impression. Printing a lie about someone is called libel. It's a real crime. Look it up.

RacinReaver: Thanks. I've heard the term used before, but was never given a clear definition. The more you know.
Then I revert to my original claim that Wikipedia is indeed, fallible.

Yes, if someone acessed the page in those six minutes, they would have been misinformed. However my entire point is that it took only six minutes, and thus an extremely small amount of activity viewed said page, before it was corrected. It may have been wrong for six minutes, but it will be right for the rest of Wikipedia's existence. The self-policing style that Wikipedia is built upon has proven itself to work.

The fact still remains though, is that it's not journalism. Like Kalekkan said, it's more of an information archive. If you want journalism, head on over to Wikinews which uses the same format. Which managed to get it right. There is not a single edit that says it was suicide. Hell, the first edit simply says "He is dead. No more details." They did get it right.

Ofcourse no one should ever source Wiki when writing a term paper. But for finding out which one of the Starjammers was Cyclops' father (Corsair), who wrote the French National Anthem (Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle), or what the name of Hitler's German Shepard was (Blondi) , it's a great source.

And I really could do without the quasi-legal lesson. No one brought it up, so your calls to "look it up" are quite unfounded. But if you really want to go that way, technically libel isn't simply printing lies about a person. It's printing lies about a person that damages ones character or reputation. If someone wrote that I was the first person to land on the moon, that wouldn't be libel. If someone wrote that I molested goats, that would be.

I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body?

GI Joe is the codename for America's highly trained special mission force. Its purpose: to defend human freedom against COBRA. A ruthless terrorist organization determined to rule the world.

24 can't jump the shark. Jack Bauer ate the shark long ago. Now 24 can only jump the water, and that doesn't mean anything. - Jazzflight
<Krizzzopolis> acid you are made of win.
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Last edited by acid; Jul 6, 2006 at 08:49 PM.
Cal
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Old Jul 14, 2006, 11:41 PM Local time: Jul 15, 2006, 02:41 PM #21 of 55
I think we're still learning how to read Wikipedia. The crisis of its legitimacy has everything to do with how we perceive it--as an encyclopaedia--than any institutional or structural aspects.

I don't think Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia. Such a word connotes guarantee, and indeed when I open that L volume of the EB and read a beautifully honed, copyedited, proofread entry on Libya, expert or not, I can't challenge it. It's encyclopaedic.

The very opportunity to edit any content on the 'online encyclopaedia' is to suggest to noobs and veterans alike that the guarantee has gone. We're basically getting shitty because there's a monstrous conceptual abyss between reference and referent. I think we should refresh the reference. Or you could carry on like LeHah.

I'm not sure if it's formally encouraged onsite, but learn to value the Discussion Pages as if they promised as much insight into the subject as did the finished (term used reservedly) product, because sometimes they bloody well do.

The truth is that Wikipedia and Encyclopaedia Britannica content both changes; it's just that a) the consumer prejudice which says something that costs several thousand dollars would never need alterations, or to a lesser extent, revision, and b) Wikipedia content can potentially change thousands of times faster than a multi-volume hardcopy counterpart's.

In this thread alone there's the usual human-error variety of adages (which of course are still thoroughly warranted), but, once we take some big-boy steps in what we collectively expect from Wikipedia, I proffer another one: the best things in life are free.

I was speaking idiomatically.
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Last edited by Cal; Jul 14, 2006 at 11:44 PM.
Marco
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Old Jul 31, 2006, 05:08 PM #22 of 55
Originally Posted by Gecko3
I browse wikipedia quite often, but just for fun, not for doing papers on, as my professors have told me (one of them quite hiliariously, after going there, and finding out that a student just copied/pasted the same thing in their research paper as the wiki article) that it's not a reliable source, which I have to agree with them on.
I disagree. For paper writting of some subjects (the uncool ones, I guess) wikipedia is AMAZING. Take a look at this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethylsulfoxide. The article is about a solvent commonly used in labs. There's absolutely nothing about methyl sulfoxide in the Encyclopedia Britanica.

What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?
POLO!
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Old Jul 31, 2006, 09:08 PM Local time: Jul 31, 2006, 09:08 PM #23 of 55
Originally Posted by gukarma
I disagree. For paper writting of some subjects (the uncool ones, I guess) wikipedia is AMAZING. Take a look at this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethylsulfoxide. The article is about a solvent commonly used in labs. There's absolutely nothing about methyl sulfoxide in the Encyclopedia Britanica.
I like how one of the references in that article is a Dead Kennedys song.

FELIPE NO
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Old Jul 31, 2006, 11:52 PM #24 of 55
Originally Posted by acid
Yes, Wikipedia is fallible. By it's very nature it's greatest strength is it's greatest weakness. However this just strengthens the idea that the system works.
Given that the system is powered by the gerbil wheel known as the internet user - thats really nothing to bolster one's argument.

Wiki does not work because it's open to everyone. Of those supposed 13,000, how many of them are educated enough to give an educated writing on any particular subject? I'm sure that a couple of them could, say, write an interesting, intelligent bit on Tipler's Rotating Cylinder - so whats that say about the other 12,985 people on there? This isn't even to say that those people have done anything - but that they're empowered to.

These 13,000 people are not checked for degrees, they're not asked for credentials. The anonymity of the internet empowers them to do what they will without a consequence beyond banning and moving on - not unlike how GFF or any other internet forum runs.

Not to mention - do not underestimate mob mentality. Do you think our current state of journalism is because people want intelligent, factual reports - or quick, digestible soundbites over your morning coffee and afternoon shit?

You cannot accept Wiki as a source for anything if anyone can edit it as they see fit. If you want to - thats your problem; do not make it mine, internet, or you'll get a hard lesson of my foot up your ass.

Originally Posted by gukarma
I disagree. For paper writting of some subjects (the uncool ones, I guess) wikipedia is AMAZING. Take a look at this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethylsulfoxide. The article is about a solvent commonly used in labs. There's absolutely nothing about methyl sulfoxide in the Encyclopedia Britanica.
In a better world, I'd be given the power to string you up by your neck for being a traitor to your better man.

"Boy, this source doesn't have what I want - but THIS DOES! Obviously my opinion is correct!" is about as fucking stupid a point as a person can make. Isn't this why we have MANY books instead of living with a single source? Isn't this why we have things like libraries instead of the soapbox mentality of the internet?

Where do you live, boy? I want to call your hometown and complain about your obvious lack of education.

What, you don't want my bikini-clad body?

Last edited by Misogynyst Gynecologist; Jul 31, 2006 at 11:55 PM.
RacinReaver
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Old Aug 1, 2006, 12:06 AM Local time: Jul 31, 2006, 10:06 PM #25 of 55
I like how you intersperse talking about how stupid something on the internet is with physical threats to people over the internet. Can I get a lol in here.

While I don't really like Wikipedia a whole lot due to the style that most people there write and the massive disparity of information between different kinds of topics, it is a very convenient souce. Frankly, I found it a lot easier to do a quick search on Wikipedia to figure out the color of the Titanium (III) Chloride salt than trek 10 minutes across campus to find the information in some book (I don't even know what book would have that kind of information when the CRC Chemistry handbook doesn't).

Jam it back in, in the dark.
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Exploding Garrmondo Weiner Interactive Swiss Army Penis > Garrmondo Network > Political Palace > Ken Lay Dead; Wikipedia Confused

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