Posted by Ira Matetsky, guest-blogging:
Wikipedia: Some Concluding Thoughts and an Invitation:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_17-2009_05_23.shtml#1242618845


   A few years ago, as the promised Information Superhighway was growing
   into the Internet that we know today, no one (to my knowledge)
   predicted that a collaboratively written, free-content, mass-linked
   website aspiring to cover all areas of human knowledge would become
   one of the most prominent information sources in the world. Still less
   did I anticipate that I would eventually play a role helping to
   administer such a site.

   Eugene inspired me to volunteer this series of posts, now drawing to a
   close, by discussing a series of cases in which courts have either
   cited to Wikipedia for information, or asked themselves whether they
   can take judicial notice of the content of a Wikipedia article.

   My own take on the reliability of Wikipedia articles is consistent
   with that suggested by some of the commenters: articles on
   non-contentious topics are usually accurate; articles on highly
   contentious articles are usually accurate on basic facts, but can be
   subject to bias and dispute with respect to the matters in
   controversy. It's an overgeneralization, but in essence, if debating a
   subject could lead to a fist-fight in a bar, or to a heated dispute in
   academe, then sooner or later the subject will be involved in a
   content dispute on Wikipedia. This is really not a surprise.

   (The surprise comes from how many additional petty matters we also
   argue about. The people who sometimes refer to Wikipedia
   administrators and experienced editors collectively as a "Hivemind"
   may have overlooked the amount of bickering that goes on every day on
   the Administrators' Noticeboards.)

   However, a strong article with more than the most basic content should
   contain citations of sources where information in the article was
   drawn from. Checking the sources, and where appropriate citing to them
   rather than the Wikipedia article itself, may often resolve the
   question of "is Wikipedia reliable enough to cite?" If no sources are
   cited, check the links to related articles; the relevant sources may
   be there. Otherwise, the article history will tell you who wrote the
   article, and sometimes a query on his or her usertalkpage will elicit
   the missing references. Beyond that, every article on Wikipedia has an
   associated "talkpage" where issues concerning the contents of the
   article, including requests for sourcing of controversial statements,
   may be addressed.

   Anyone relying on Wikipedia must take into account that there are no
   guarantees as to who contributed a given article or sentence, or why.
   (In fact, this is emphasized in a couple of places on the site
   itself.) I think the general population of Internet users has become
   more aware of both the strengths and weaknesses of various resources,
   including Wikipedia, than was the case even a few years ago. At a
   dinner with extended family recently at which my role on Wikipedia
   came up, my niece, aged 11, told me that her middle-school librarian
   had cautioned her students not to rely automatically on the accuracy
   of Wikipedia and to double-check the information before using it for
   anything important.

   More generally, everyone, and especially those young enough not to
   remember pre-Internet times, will all come to learn more generally
   which types of research can effectively be performed on the Internet,
   and which benefit most from access to older or more traditional
   resources. (Readers who are lawyers will recognize this as analogous
   to the discussions that go on between younger lawyers heavily
   dependent on Lexis or Westlaw, and more senior lawyers who believe
   that thinking through a problem and researching comprehensively often
   requires a trip to the library.) No one -- whether a student writing a
   paper or someone looking for information -- should simply accept
   information derived from any source without thinking through the
   quality of the source and what biases it might introduce.

   Wikipedia is a valuable but a flawed resource and, as I stressed in
   the first of these posts, its main strength is also its main weakness:
   that anyone can contribute to it. Some articles suffer from political
   or other biases (a core content policy is that all articles must be
   written from a "neutral point of view," but not every editor is
   committed to upholding policy, and in any event, NPOV is often in the
   eye of the beholder). Some articles have been tampered with playfully
   or maliciously, and although most "vandalism" or "trolling" edits are
   picked up and reverted quickly, others are not, and some have lingered
   for months.

   (Most vandals are just passing nuisances, such as bored
   schoolchildren, but some are more persistent, and a small but
   extremely troublesome handful are persistent to the point of doing
   serious damage. I'd be interested, just as a point of information, in
   learning whether there is any legal precedent for in some fashion
   barring such people from write-accessing or editing on a site. I will
   add that this is intended as a purely academic question.)

   Moreover, the quality of articles varies very widely, and some
   articles need to be expanded or rewritten before they will have much
   value. Some articles are absent altogether; even with 2.8 million
   articles, there is a lot more yet to be written. (I envy some of the
   earlier editors who had the whole scope of knowledge to write on a
   blank slate, but there is still plenty more to be done. The occasional
   suggestion that "everything worth writing on-wiki has been written" is
   no more accurate than the comment of the apocryphal patent examiner
   who supposedly urged that "everything worth inventing has been
   invented.)

   And yet -- for all of Wikipedia's flaws, the fact is that it has
   become a central resource relied upon by many. That suggests that
   researchers typically find Wikipedia content both accessible and
   reliable. As I pointed out in my first post, Conspirators on this blog
   often link to a Wikipedia article when introducing a topic. They
   wouldn't do that if the articles weren't reasonably reliable at least
   in their basics. In my own experience, when I Google a topic and I
   come upon the Wikipedia article and read it, I find the information
   reliable. It may or may not be complete or brilliantly written, but it
   rarely is just wrong.

   This will be my last post in this series, but I'll try to respond to
   any ongoing dialog in the comment thread. For those interested in
   further discussion, I assure you that there is ongoing dialog about
   virtually every issue affecting Wikipedia to be found somewhere right
   on Wikipedia. Although a few core policies are handed down by the
   Wikimedia Foundation, and some others arise from technical features
   and limitations of the software, almost all other Wikipedia policies
   and guidelines are developed largely by "the community," which means
   the collective body of editors, and more specifically, those who care
   enough about a given issue to participate in discussing it.

   For those interested in discussing these issues without venturing onto
   Wikipedia itself, there is ongoing discussion of both theoretical
   objections to Wikipedia's structure and day-to-day operating issues on
   a website called "Wikipedia Review" (www.wikipediareview.com). (I
   participate there on occasion myself -- I had not intended to, but
   someone invited me to join and I accepted.) "WR" can be a mixed bag,
   containing some instances of overgeneralizations and too much nasty ad
   hominem for my taste -- but interspersed with that is some of the
   well-reasoned criticism and commentary I've seen. WR also has a blog,
   blog.wikipediareview.com, whose contents be more accessible than the
   sometimes "inside baseball" discussions on the main forum. More
   recently, some present and former WR members have started another
   site, www.akahele.com, which also contains critical essays and
   commentary.

   But in my opinion, the best way of enhancing or improving Wikipedia,
   whether by tweaking one article at a time or by advocating for some
   site-wide policy change, is to roll up one's sleeves and join in
   contributing there. For me, at least, I've combined the fun of a new
   hobby mixed with the enjoyment of sharing knowledge and helping
   resolve disputes.

   Remember, anyone can edit, with or without registering an account.
   (Creating a brand-new article requires registration, which can be done
   using one's real name or a pseudonym.) The user interface is
   accessible even to those without computer skills (believe me, if I
   could master it, then anyone can), and within a few minutes of sitting
   down at the keyboard, you'll be an editor and a Wikipedian. Any editor
   can edit not just articles, but the policy discussions and related
   pages as well.

   If you get stuck, [[Wikipedia:Help]] should link you to a page
   containing whatever information you need, although Volokh Conspirators
   (and anyone else) are also welcome to inquire at [[User
   talk:Newyorkbrad]] if you run into any problems. Perhaps a few of us
   can conspire there to pick a law-related article to collaborate on and
   bring up to Featured Article. (And also feel free to e-mail me with
   any questions or comments if you prefer; please use Newyorkbrad -at-
   Gmail.com rather than my work e-mail for this purpose.)

   My thanks to Eugene and the other Conspirators for giving me a forum
   here this week (and also for giving me lots of interesting and
   challenging blog-reading over the years), to everyone who has
   commented or will comment on one of my posts, to the knowledgeable
   people who responded in detail to my query on Monday about the [[Saxbe
   fix]], and to all of the readers.

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