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Wikipedia Articles Not Always Accurate

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  • Wikipedia Articles Not Always Accurate

    WIKIPEDIA ARTICLES NOT ALWAYS ACCURATE
    By: Ben Casey

    The Rebel Yell
    Issue: 04/17/2006
    Section: Opinion

    Leo Szilard once said, "Even if we accept as the basic tenet of true
    democracy that one moron is equal to one genius, is it necessary to
    go a further step and hold that two morons are better than one genius?"

    Wikipedia has received a great deal of press lately. For those of
    you who don't know what it is, Wikipedia is an online collaborative
    encyclopedia that is free for anyone to edit. The basic problem with
    this concept is well documented, and you are bound to find an error
    of assertion or omission on its Web site somewhere. But it's fairly
    self-correcting because of its size, and no repository of knowledge
    can claim perfection. In fact, in December 2005 Nature, one of
    the foremost publications in the sciences, published a news story
    declaring that Wikipedia was "about as inaccurate" as Encyclopedia
    Britannica. Britannica is the most trusted publication in the English
    language. The rivalry between Britannica and Wikipedia is something
    worth noting.

    Wikipedia compares itself to Britannica at every opportunity, harping
    at great length on any inaccuracies or omissions found in the latter,
    posing them as rivals and making a great to-do of their own theoretical
    superiority. Wikipedia's most ardent supporters have always believed
    that it will inevitably replace elite publications like Britannica,
    and some will go to any lengths to prove it. The rivalry is, generally,
    one-way. Britannica recognizes the ambitions of Wikipedia, but does
    not generally respond. When the Nature study came out, critics of
    Wikipedia noticed its slant almost immediately.

    For one, "about as inaccurate" apparently meant that Wikipedia had
    been judged a third more inaccurate than Britannica. Apparently, the
    experiment focused on the sciences, wherein Wikipedia is generally
    less inaccurate; and minor inaccuracies or omissions were treated as
    equal to major ones.

    Then came the Britannica response (which can be found in full at
    http://corporate.britannica.com/britannica_natu re_response.pdf). It
    is a truly remarkable document which amounts to a 20 page breakdown
    of a major science publication by the English language's most
    trusted encyclopedia. As a science enthusiast, I found it literally
    awe-inspiring. Within their response, Britannica rebuts nearly half
    of the criticisms made about its articles with everything from humble
    admissions to withering scorn. It questions the Nature study's biased
    methodology; most importantly, it reveals that several reviews were not
    even of Encyclopedia Britannica articles at all - some came from the
    Book of the Year, and others were hodgepodges from various sources. In
    one case, a reviewer referred to material not part of any Britannica
    publication. The verdict was fairly clear: the Nature study - conducted
    by Nature and its editors, not a third party - was almost entirely
    without merit. Even in a study dramatically biased in Wikipedia's
    favor, the difference in inaccuracy was astounding. And yet, the
    story was spun as a triumph for the collaborative encyclopedia.

    The ideological reasons why the Nature editors might have felt it
    incumbent to publish a biased and misleading study on the merits
    of Wikipedia are many, but no good cause justifies doctoring the
    evidence. Sadly, the passions of Nature's editors apparently got
    away with them, leading them to tarnish the reputation of one of
    the scientific community's most prestigious publications to the
    benefit of a Web site which has already become extremely well known
    in its field. The errors found in Wikipedia are dramatic because the
    "free for anyone to edit" policy allows anyone to come in and say,
    for instance, that the Armenian genocide was actually a civil war.

    Information from Wikipedia needs to be taken with a grain of salt.

    There's no reason it should replace the scholarly, well-edited and
    traditional encyclopedia - exemplified by Britannica - which will
    always be a consistent and accurate resource to check the facts
    presented by the wild and potentially hazardous collaborative
    intelligence of Wikipedia.
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