Wikipedia As a "War Zone," Rather Than a Collaboration 194
horselight writes "A new study by sociologists studying social networking has determined that Wikipedia is not an intellectual project based on mutual collaboration, but a war zone. The study finds that although the content does end up being accurate as a rule, it's anything but neutral or unbiased. The study includes extensive data on access and editing patterns of users related to major events, such as the death of Michael Jackson and the edit storms that ensued." The article explains that the research (here's the paper at PLoS One) looked in particular at controversial entries, not ones about obscure duck-hunting equipment or long-settled standards.
Whua! (Score:5, Informative)
It's a start (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Whua! (Score:5, Informative)
"Holodomor" articles in multiple languages directly contradict each other (and one in English contains nothing but US propaganda and baseless accusations of Robert Conquest).
As a rule, Wikipedia articles about all historical events in 20th or 21st century are heavily colored by propaganda, and likely to be wrong in all but most basic aspects (time, location, few associated political figures, reaction of the media in the country where prevailing editor happened to be located, etc.)
Re:Whua! (Score:5, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Coatrack [wikipedia.org]
Has to do with an article going off-topic in a biased manner
Summary makes bits up, as usual (Score:5, Informative)
Typical inflammatory Slashdot story that gets it so wrong you have to wonder whether the submitter read TFA. The Slashdot summary says:
What the paper actually says:
The paper does say there are some articles are the subject of what appears to be permanent edit wars. But they are a tiny proportion:
The summary says:
The paper is a study of human interaction in social media. It is not a study into the quality of Encyclopeadia's. It draws no conclusions on the accuracy, neutrality, or bias in of Wikipedia's articles whatsoever. Nonetheless when they set the scene in the introduction they quote this result from another paper:
Re:Whua! (Score:4, Informative)
and furry pr0n.