Posted by Ira Matetsky, guest-blogging:
Some First Thoughts on Wikipedia
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_10-2009_05_16.shtml#1242098183


   Hi. Eugene introduced me earlier, and some of you may recognize my
   name from a recent comment thread or two. As Eugene mentioned, I work
   as a litigation attorney at a firm in New York City ... and I first
   met him at a summer school mathematics program (which, I would like to
   remind him, we were carefully coached not to call "math camp") thirty
   years ago.

   I've been reading the Conspiracy faithfully for five or six years now,
   and recently I've noticed Eugene's series of posts about court
   decisions that discuss or mention Wikipedia, the free-content,
   mass-written, ever-growing online encyclopedia. I've also noticed that
   in unrelated posts and comments, many Conspirators routinely link to
   relevant Wikipedia articles and seem to operate from the basic
   assumption that they will generally be factually accurate. So I infer
   that there is at least some respect for Wikipedia among some
   Conspirators. At the same time, I saw the comments on the thread where
   Eugene introduced me this afternoon, so I know there is some
   skepticism too.

   Eugene's posts, and everyone's comments, have interested me because
   I've contributed to Wikipedia myself, and I'm an administrator on the
   site and a member of the in-house Arbitration Committee. (Wikipedians
   may edit under pseudonyms, and until this point I hadn't mentioned my
   real name on-wiki, although a determined critic managed to "out" my
   real identity about a year ago. For anyone curious, on Wikipedia I'm
   known as Newyorkbrad, Brad being my middle name.)

   I hope to do two things this week. First, to explain to Conspirators a
   little more about how Wikipedia operates and address a couple of
   aspects that may not have occurred to casual readers. (I might even
   recruit a couple of new Wikipedia contributors -- but in fairness, I'm
   going to link to a couple of criticism sites as well, so you'll know
   what you might be getting into.) And second, I hope to gather input on
   some important issues from contributors here who will have an
   intelligent reader's familiarity with the site, but no predisposition
   in our internal, sometimes eternal, debates.

   Anyone who has spent time on the Internet has heard about Wikipedia by
   now and has at least some knowledge of how it works. But here are some
   basics for those less familiar, which the rest of you can safely skip
   and go on to the end or come back tomorrow.

   Wikipedia defines itself as "the encyclopedia that anyone can edit."
   That is literally true: anyone (short of a few sitebanned people) with
   an Internet connection can sit down at the keyboard and start editing.
   The "anyone" who can edit includes you, if you are so inclined; you
   don't even need to register an account in order to edit an existing
   article, though you do in order to create a new article from scratch.

   For my part, I was drawn in as many others are: I ran a Google search
   to locate some information, and the Wikipedia article was the top
   result. I saw a mistake in an article and corrected it. (The double
   brackets are internal wikicode for a link to another page, and I'll
   use that code here as well.) Interestingly, my introduction to a flaw
   of the wiki collaborative editing model came a short while later
   later, when someone took the correction I made and immediately
   uncorrected it. Fortunately, when I made the change a second time, I
   figured out how to provide a more detailed explanation in the "edit
   summary" field, and this time it stuck. If I'd been reverted one more
   time, I probably would have shaken my head and walked away, as
   subject-matter experts, unfortunately, often do. But instead, having
   made one change led me to want to make others, and then I registered
   to start creating pages, and it became a hobby.

   Wikipedia has existed for less than eight years, and its growth and
   popularity have far exceeded anything that those who created it could
   possibly have imagined. Today, there are millions of registered
   "editors" with accounts, although there are probably a few thousand
   truly dedicated everyday contributors, and there are close to three
   million articles. Content can be found on virtually every subject one
   might wish to write about: from Poe and poetry to pomegranites and
   Pokemon; from Poland and Portugal to Powell and Posner; from Pol Pot
   and Potsdam to polarity and pottery. (Of these, there may be a
   disproportionate amount of Pokemon; editors come from an enormous
   diversity of background but have historically skewed younger, for
   fairly obvious reasons.)

   There are Wikipedias in several hundred languages, of which English is
   the largest (German is second), and there are also Wiktionary and
   Wikinews and a Wikiversity and Wikiquote and Wikisource, and Commons
   (a repository for image and sound files that can be used by all the
   projects) and Meta (for coordination). All of this is operated under
   the auspices of the Wikimedia Foundation, a charitable foundation that
   owns the hardware and is, theoretically at least, in charge of it all.
   But my involvement with the English Wikipedia is probably enough for
   one lifetime.

   So why does this matter? One reason is that a lot of people find that
   editing, or even administering the site, is fun. That is is essential,
   as virtually everyone involved is a volunteer. Another is the
   satisfaction of contributing to an ever-growing source of "free
   knowledge." In addition to being "the encyclopedia that everyone can
   edit," Wikipedia is "the free encyclopedia," whose content can freely
   be reproduced on other websites or in other media. (This actually
   happens. One of my first articles was a short biography of a lawyer in
   Alabama who became a judge in Puerto Rico, named Peter J. Hamilton. It
   turns out that there is a Peter J. Hamilton Elementary School in
   Mobile, whose website has a "did you ever wonder who Peter J. Hamilton
   was?" page, and the answer turns out to be my article.)

   But there is another major reason that a lot of people care about
   Wikipedia, whether they participate themselves in it or not, and why
   there are many critics concerned about the increasingly widespread
   role of the site. Because of its popularity and also because of its
   interconnected network of links, Wikipedia articles tend to score
   extremely high on Google and other Internet searches. In particular,
   if one searches on an individual's name, his or her Wikipedia article
   will generally be among the top group of Google hits -- much of the
   time the very first one. This has implications that are quite
   significant and in many instances troubling, which I will be
   discussing over the next couple of days.

   That's long enough for an introductory post; I'm sure many are waiting
   for me to reach something more controversial. Over the next few days
   I'm going to explore some specific issues, beginning tomorrow with the
   question of how Wikipedia articles about living people can affect
   their subjects, and continuing later in the week with issues of site
   governance and article quality, behavioral standards and the role of
   anonymity.

   The comments thread should be open, and I'd welcome suggestions for
   aspects I might address. (I make only one request: that regular
   Wikipedians who are looking over my shoulder, as well as Wikipedia
   critics from Wikipedia Review and elsewhere, bear in mind that this is
   a general-interest audience. Please don't hijack the comment threads
   with our own internal disputes and debates. No one here wants to read
   who is a sockpuppet of whom or whether so-and-so's block was fair or
   not. We have ANI and Wikipedia Review to hash those things out later.)

   And one last unrelated request. A couple of weeks ago, [[Saxbe fix]]
   was the day's featured article, meaning it had pride of place on the
   main page for a day. I hadn't contributed to the article before, but I
   did some copyediting while it was mainpaged, and in doing so, I came
   across the assertion that President Reagan nominated Robert Bork
   rather than Orrin Hatch to the Supreme Court because Hatch's
   appointment would have raised an emoluments clause issue and the
   administration was not convinced that the Saxbe fix is constitutional.
   Although I had a dim recollection of the issue having come up in
   passing, I found that statement as written implausible and edited the
   article to say that this issue played only a small role in Judge
   Bork's selection. However, I didn't have a good source suitable for
   citation in the article to support my assertion, and I've been asked
   for one. This certainly would seem like an appropriate audience to
   fill in that particular lacuna. So if anyone can help with a source on
   this, please let me know in in the comments thread so I can go back
   and add it to the article.

   Or better still, go visit [[Saxbe fix]] and edit it yourself.

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