Two Wikipedia Spinoffs In The News
from the more-reliable? dept
Wired has a roundup of two Wikipedia spinoffs that have been in the news recently. Both sites, Citizendium and Veropedia, were launched because their founders felt that Wikipedia had reliability problems that could only be addressed by an independent project. But their approaches are very different. Citizendium is what the open source software world would call a fork. They launched the site with some Wikipedia articles as the baseline, but they're not contributing their changes back to the Wikipedia project. That means that the two projects are diverging over time, and in a few years the content on the two sites will be quite different. It also means that there's going to be a lot of duplication of effort: the content in Citizendium and Wikipedia will largely be redundant. In contrast, Wikipedia is, in open source terms, "upstream" from Veropedia. Just as distributions like Ubuntu and Red Hat take Linux code, improve it, and then package it for public consumption, making a profit in the process, so Veropedia is going to take a subset of Wikipedia, do some additional work to ensure it's reliable, and then publish it on an ad-supported site. Unlike Citizendium, Veropedia is planning to contribute its changes back to Wikipedia. Personally, I'm not convinced that there's a pressing need for either effort, and I'm particularly skeptical of Citizendium. I think Clay Shirky is right to question the underlying rationale for Citizendium, and while founder Larry Sanger has touted some modest successes over the last year, they're going to need some massive growth to catch up to Wikipedia.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: encyclopedias, wikipedia, wikis
Companies: citizendium, veropedia, wikipedia
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Hmmm
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People still believe everything they read.
It is very hard for me to use any information that was contributed by just anyone with a computer and an Internet connection.
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Not a fork
(Full disclosure: I'm a Citizendium contributor.)
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Why?
This, to me, makes Citizendium seem pointless as a site on its own. If it were to exist as a project whose members strived to make great articles and incorporate them into Wikipedia using the expert/public idea, that would make more sense.
Either way, both sites seem to be solving a problem that doesn't exist. Wikinoids like to espouse how unreliable Wiki is, but I've yet to see an example of someone find something blantanly untrue on the site for more than a small period of time, and Wikipedia isn't meant to be an absolutely definitive source on anything, anyway.
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Find It
Nowadays, it's difficult to find three sources that are truly different sources. So many websites get the same information from the same source (without quoting the original source) that we cannot know whether they are the same source over and over, or if they are truly unique sources.
The problem with having "backups" of Wikipedia is that the source information will all be the same, and if the original source is inaccurate, so will all the downstream info.
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Re: Why?
"As was noted by a commenter in the Shirky article, though Citizendium is 'competing' with Wikipedia, they are both released under the GPL."
Not quite; any Wikipedia articles which have been copied to Citizendium retain the GPL unless and until they change enough to lose their Wikipedia content, but Citizendium is just about to choose which license it will use for articles it originates.
"Not true for the reverse, as I understand it -- a Wiki article would need to go through some sort of 'expert' before posting (I'm not a Citizendium user, though, so I could be wrong)."
The only thing that would have to happen to the Wikipedia article is that the person copying it would have to remember to mark it as having Wikipedia content. If it isn't copied over by the person who originally wrote most of the Wikipedia article (which is mostly how Citizendium gets them these days), it's also marked as an "external article" until it has undergone significant changes.
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