Yahoo! Search Providing Support to Wikipedia 130
Jamesday writes "Yahoo! Search will also be providing support for Wikipedia. Discussions, started at the same time as the aforementioned Google announcement, have been ongoing with both Yahoo! and Google but only the Google news leaked. It's now more clear why Wikipedia said there was no need to worry about undue influence from any single sponsor."
How about from two? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How about from two? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How about from two? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How about from two? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:2)
Yahoo! search for `xyzzy' [yahoo.com]
Google search for `xyzzy' [google.com]
Tinfoil Hat time! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tinfoil Hat time! (Score:2)
Although I'm pretty sure that's gotta be some kind of copyright violation or something with the images.. I guess you could claim parody on that.
Re:Tinfoil Hat time! (Score:2)
BIAS! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:BIAS! (Score:2)
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
search for 'xyzzy' [yagoohoogle.com]
Hey! Thanks! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hey! Thanks! (Score:1)
The last boss was hard...
Re:How about from two? (Score:4, Funny)
Look, it's weird:
Yahoo! search for asfdhfjewrtwsdfsdfgt [yahoo.com]
Google search for asfdhfjewrtwsdfsdfgt [google.com]
They're *EXACTLY* the same result pages. If that's not a proof, I don't know what is...
(By the way, re-read the parent post, it says Yahoo! *used* to use the Google engine. Not anymore...)
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:2)
And now they're different! (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:3, Funny)
> Yahoo! search for `xyzzy' [yahoo.com]
"Results 1 - 10 of about 165,000 for xyzzy- 0.02 sec."
Nothing happens.
> Google search for `xyzzy' [google.com]
"Results 1 - 10 of about 287,000 for xyzzy. (0.24 seconds)"
Almost twice as much nothing happens.
A hollow voice says "Who do you think you are, Scott Adams?"
Re:How about from two? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, I might be overlooking something. How do you suggest the vendor might influence Wikipedia? What could a similar site do to prevent such influence?
Re:How about from two? (Score:4, Insightful)
http://www.verio.com/about/legal/aup.cfm [verio.com]
Note in particular:
Other Activities -- Engaging in activities, whether lawful or unlawful, that Verio determines to be harmful to its subscribers, operations, reputation, goodwill, or customer relations.
Since Yahoo and Google are donating hosting, you could argue that they might hold even greater influence over Wikipedia (i.e. we're giving this to you for free so you have to play by all our rules).
I assume that Wikipedia's position is that since they will diversify across several donors, if one becomes too restrictive, the content in question could be moved to services provided by a different donnor.
For example, if Wikipedia had an article which put Google's search technology in a better light than Yahoo!, then Yahoo! might not want to have a part in hosting those articles. But because Wikipedia gets hosting donated from multiple sources, it could just move the offending material to a host not provided by Yahoo!
Re:How about from two? (Score:2)
Take off the tin foil hat.
Re:How about from two? (Score:2)
Re:How about from two? (Score:2)
Am I legally required to include the exclamation mark every time I type Yahoo? Doing so makes me feel like, well, a yahoo.
Why do I get 7 seperate cookies (promptly deleted) plopped onto my computer every time I visit Yahoogroups?
Re:How about from two? (Score:2)
Here's an amusing read on the subject of how to write these names (Yahoo! E*Trade Macy*s et al)
http://www.theslot.com/webnames.html
Re: How about from two? (Score:2)
What worries me is that both sponsors are in the same business; that of providing access to information. And I think that's where a more insidious type of influence might lie. What if, for example, Google got to see new articles immediately, but the rest of us had to wait for a fe
Re: How about from two? (Score:2)
> see new articles immediately, but the
> rest of us had to wait for a few
> minutes, or even hours?
I don't see why this is a problem. In the printing press era, sponsors get to see the completed work months before the rest of the world does. Is it that terrible when they get, say, a day? How is this different from a moderated newsgroup, where the "powers that be" get to individually examine and approve every message before the subscribers?
Re: How about from two? (Score:2)
Re: How about from two? (Score:2)
Re: How about from two? (Score:2)
Re: How about from two? (Score:2)
So if I understand this correctly, Yahoo and Google are not donating the use of equipment at their own data centers, they're donating hardware that Wikipedia will install and integrate at a data center of their choice.
This seems to present EVEN LESS of a problem. I can see how Google or Yahoo might be in an unfair bargaining position if they had their own MIS people standing over the server and saying "do what we say or we unplug it", but if they don't, aren't they in p
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Re:How about from two? (Score:2)
Yes, it seems to be a mutual collaboration too, I recall Yahoo! took the DomainKey [yahoo.com] initiative, and Gmail soon followed, so it's not limited to searches.
Re:How about from two? (Score:1)
Yahoo! is turning around... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Yahoo! is turning around... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Yahoo! is turning around... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yahoo! is turning around... (Score:2, Insightful)
That doesn't really make any sense.
Re:Yahoo! is turning around... (Score:5, Interesting)
I read that article.
Re:Yahoo! is turning around... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yahoo isn't that far behind! (Score:4, Interesting)
Google's Q4 2004 profits: $399,000,000
Hardly a vast difference, the thing that people forget is that while google may perhaps be technologically superior its profits aren't that much greater.
Re:Yahoo isn't that far behind! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Yahoo isn't that far behind! (Score:2)
Re:Yahoo isn't that far behind! (Score:3, Insightful)
good news (Score:5, Insightful)
That's why I think these deals are a good thing. If companies are willing to donate bandwidth and server storage to wikipedia, that will help the project quite a bit. Of course, we are all concerned about wikipedia being corrupted by companies, and something awful happening to the whole project. I, for one, think wikimedia is smart enough and dedicated enough to avoid this. And even if they arn't, let's all remember that the whole *point* of wikimedia releasing everything under commons licensing is that *no one* (not even wikimedia) can lock the content away or commercialize it. If wikimedia starts becoming evil, someone can (and will) fork the project and re-release the entire thing.
Re:good news (Score:2, Interesting)
I certainly hope so. Remember what happened to CDDB (aka Gracenote)? And to a lesser extent IMDB.
Re:good news (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:good news (Score:5, Informative)
I has been a hell of a lot better in that last few weeks. Wikipedia's one fault, in the past, was just what you mention above, however it no longer seems to be an issue.
Of course, we are all concerned about wikipedia being corrupted by companies, and something awful happening to the whole project.
I know you refute this point I quote, however it bears further discussion. The very nature of Wikipedia fights corruption. The content is created dynamically such that any 'influence' over the content would have to be universal. Thus, I worry not.
Re:good news (Score:1)
Wikipedia tends toward very goodness over time. Certain subject areas may be corrupted for certain amounts of time while the overall quality improves. As with anything, independent verification is required for a non-trivial level of trust.
Re:good news (Score:2)
Re:good news (Score:2)
Wikimedia isn't licensing or releasing under any license. The authors are licensing and releasing to Wikimedia (and everyone else).
The difference doesn't seem that great until you consider who can change the license (not Wikimedia), who can send takedown notices (not Wikimedia) and who can republish their work under non-GFDL licenses elsewhere (not Wikimedia). As one of the authors I've done things like granting other licenses to other people for my work, something Wikimedia just c
No Worries... (Score:5, Insightful)
Bad trend (Score:5, Insightful)
Meaning that people will search for something, be present with an encyclopedia (which isn't) by the search engine, then take what it says to be correct as if it had been fact-checked. There are just too many errors in Wikipedia for it be turning up when students search for things on the internet.
Re:Bad trend (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Bad trend (Score:1)
Re:Bad trend (Score:1, Insightful)
Unfortunately Wikipedia has effectively drowned most of them out.
Bullshit. (Score:2)
--grendel drago
Re:Bad trend (Score:1)
Re:Bad trend (Score:1)
This is a *good* thing (Score:2)
Back in "the olden days," if I'm interested in a subject and I look it up somewhere, I'm likely to believe 100% of what I read, regardless of how accurate it is (both factually correct and representative).
Nowadays people are accustomed to seeing crap, and therefore being skeptical of it. If I search Google for some topic and I find a dozen web site
Likewise in printed encyclopaedias (Score:1)
There are just too many errors in Wikipedia for it be turning up when students search for things on the internet.
There are just too many errors in World Book Encyclopedia for it be turning up when students search for things in the library.
Re:Bad trend (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not at all like a real peer-reviewed journal, where the review and comment process is much more rigorous.
Sure, if I spew some blatantly false blather, someone will eventually catch it and fix it. But how long will the wrong information be out there for some poor student to see and think is true vetted "peer-reviewed" data?
My wife teaches various aspects of anthropology and works with some genuine peer-reviewed academic journals. She'd never accept Wikipedia as a real reference in a student paper. (She in fact rants about it frequently for how common errors are.) Neither would she accept someguyswebsite.com either, of course. Many credible sources also have their own websites, and then there's always the horrible prospect of actually going into a library for research.
Wikipedia has its uses, I still refer to it myself sometimes when I'm just looking something up out of curiosity, but I treat everything I read there with a grain of salt.
This article by one of Wikipedia's original co-founders I think very precisely sums up some of the challenges Wikipedia faces to be considered a true, academic-level information source on par with "real" peer-reviews journals and encyclopedias.
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2004/12/30/142458/2
Re:Bad trend (Score:1, Interesting)
I've seen false content last a year.
But besides incorrect information, there's what's missing. I see people add legitimate information, and some guy deletes it, lies in the edit summary and ticks "minor edit", and nobody ever notices.
Re:Bad trend (Score:1)
Really? What false content? On what article? Please tell us so we can check it on the history Wikipedia provides. And why didn't you change it if you knew it to be wrong?
Wikipedia provides a service that harks back to the original days of the net, where anyone could change anything for information to be passed efficiently to those who needed it. Sure, be a critic of that system if you like, but don't randomly make things up (or at best provide information that we
Re:Bad trend (Score:1)
If you do know Wikipedia (and you've convinced me you do), then you'll also know that a lot of people go out of their way to attack it. everyone from complete n00bs to high-ranking Brittanica editors have criticized the way WP works, without basis.
To be fair to me, I never said this behaviour doesn't go on, I only asked you to back up your statement that you saw an article remain incorrect for years.
Re:Bad trend (Score:2)
As an academic, I know all about the strengths and weaknesses of peer review. On the one hand, it is rigorous, and immediately eliminates totally ridiculous or crank theories. On the other hand, it can suffer from biases on the part of the editors/reviewers, and novel ideas can sometimes be unfairly dismissed.
In wikipedia, content is dynamic and edited by a community, which makes it robust again
Not just the internet (Score:1)
Information is trixie and false. There are no guarentees, even when witnessing something first-hand.
Students should not trust any source they find, and should try to find corroborating evidence from may sources. Students should also find out the biases of the sources they use (there are always biases) and take those into account when trying to form a complete picture of whatever they're researching.
All media ar
Re:Bad trend (Score:1)
Did you stay in a Holiday Inn Express last night?
Re:Bad trend (Score:2)
Why? Do you believe this because it's been proven or because you'd like to think that it works just as well?
Until someone (prefreably someone impartial) has done a study on this, it's difficult to know what to believe.
Wikipedia Editor (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.eclipse-plugins.info/eclipse/plugin_de
Lets hope (Score:2, Insightful)
I see hard times coming.
Re:Lets hope (Score:2)
Re:Lets hope (Score:2)
Re:Lets hope (Score:2)
undue influence (Score:1)
Re:undue influence (Score:2)
let it begin (Score:1, Funny)
Speaking of Y! Search (Score:2, Interesting)
Yahoo Search! [yahoo.com]
Clusty [clusty.com]
MSN Search [msn.com]
Check them out when/if having problems with Google. Second one looks especially interesting. Third one is the best for warez and stuff (amazingly).
Now if we've had an alternative to groups.google.com...
Re:Speaking of Y! Search (Score:1)
Mooter [mooter.com]
Ixquick [ixquick.com]
Mooter is worth an extra look, to check out their "clustering" search methods. Both sites are very useful.
Re:So true (Score:2)
I thought Jimbo had already sold out to Google... (Score:5, Interesting)
gave me a pen that lights up.
<jwales> When I saw that, I was like "oooh, pen!" and then I was soooo
mesmerized that I signed over the rights to everything. ha ha.
(actual quote, on IRC. It's funny; laugh.)
Re:I thought Jimbo had already sold out to Google. (Score:1)
No, Ma'am, it's not, it really isn't, thank you.
Critics of web referencing to lose ground (Score:5, Insightful)
With Yahoo joining the club, the site obviously will get a tremendous boost in the aforementioned correlation of increased visitors producing increased accuracy. Also, with the Yahoo deal, and with other dynamic visitor-updated info sites like blogs being taken more seriously by the mainstream media, you can expect other high rolling companies to follow Yahoo's lead.
By the way, when I'm looking for an answer to any question that requires human interpretation to my query, I use ask-it-here [ask-it-here.com]. While I'm being informative, here's a link [mozilla.org] to a Firefox extension that lets you (I think by means of a right click) look up a word quickly on a number of sites including Wiki.
Accuracy as an average, not instantaneously (Score:2)
Yep, that's true, BUT: this is only an accurate statement when integrated over time. At any given moment, it's quite possible the article has just been "spammed" or somehow defaced, either maliciously or inadvertently. You see, since the most-recently-edited version is available the moment the edit has been made, it takes some time before a damaged page gets
I think Yahoo! just wants to change the Yahoo (Score:1)
Too many links. (Score:3, Interesting)
Slashdot Style! (Score:2)
Yahoo and Spam (Score:3, Insightful)
Yahoo you will remember pulled a fast one and ENABLED every single newsletter and other junk mail type preference automatically, even if when you signed up you specifically said you didn't want to receive junk mail.
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/03/29/18
In other words, if Yahoo thinks they can get away with it, they will screw their users.
I havn't gotten that same sense with google yet. They havn't pulled a fast one, tried to lock up my gmail emails or any of the other stunts.
That counts for a lot with me. I just don't have time to work out what stunt Yahoo is going to pull next.
Size of Wiki (Score:1, Interesting)
A full multilingual database history image is about 50GB (only half of which is E
Relative quality of indexing (Score:1, Interesting)
the Yahoo indexes are *MUCH* better than Google. Being a committed lifelong Google fan, this surprised me. But, as they say, "competition is good". May the competition begin!
I know it's necessary, but... (Score:2)
And now we have corporate sponsorship. It's inherently tainted, and it's insane to think it's not, simply because the sponsors can pull out and leave the project high and dry. What happens when Yahoo!'s CEO is discovered to be a baby-eating monster, or Sergey Brin is
sponsoring knowledge (Score:1)
(But what do you have against Terry Semel?)
Re:I know it's necessary, but... (Score:2)
At the moment the biggest single party vulnerabilty is the Wikimedia Foundation, since it owns all o
Re:well (Score:1)
Yep. And Sony got Betamax VCRs out a year before the first VHS VCR hit the market, so I guess Betamax won, too.
Early lead != victory. (A better moral for "The Tortoise and the Hare", IMHO.)