Sorry to intrude myslf like this in the conversation.
First of all, let me present myself: My name is Andrea Sassanelli, and I'm Italian. I have just started studying Haskell at the UoEdinburgh this year, and immediatelly fell in love with it.
 
On a sidenote, the wikipedia does rely on moderators who review the changes, but common users are able to undo changes as well, and can therefore bring a maliciously messed up page back to it's origiinal state. Basically MediaWiki/WikiPedia rely on the assumption that there are more good folk than bad folk, and this (IMHO) should be even more true in the case of a relatvelly "medium/small-scale" thing like the Haskell Documentation (small compared to a whole encyclopedia, i mean).
 
Open documentation like this is definitelly a good idea to make the language docs not only more accessible, but also more user-friendly, and would surely give a positive image to the community as a whole.
 
I unfortunatelly am not suted (?yet?) to work on any usefull documentation, as I am a novice, but I think the system would work.
 
 
Andrea Sassanelli
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