Russia To Upgrade Homegrown Encyclopedia After Putin Pans Wikipedia (reuters.com) 205
Russia is to set up a new online site for its national encyclopedia after President Vladimir Putin said Wikipedia was unreliable and should be replaced. From a report: The move will ensure people can find "reliable information that is constantly updated on the basis of scientifically verified sources of knowledge," a government resolution said. Putin last month proposed replacing the crowd-sourced online encyclopedia Wikipedia with an electronic version of the Great Russian Encyclopaedia - the successor to the Soviet Union's main encyclopedia. "This, at any rate, would be reliable information offered in a modern form," Putin said then. Further reading: Putin Signs Law Making Russian Apps Mandatory On Smartphones, Computers.
Mother Russia? (Score:3)
hmmmm (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:hmmmm (Score:5, Informative)
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Some seemingly-irrelevant pages have inaccuracies. A lot of celebrities have noted problems with the Wikipedia pages created for them.
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A lot of celebrities have noted problems
Indeed
Re:hmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Point out any errors on the page for the Model T. Go on. It's more thorough and accurate than some books on the subject. Or the Cessna 172 page. But yes, Taylor Swift's page was ravaged after she gave a political endorsement. That's not an "error". It's deliberate sabotage. If you avoid pages that don't have paid saboteurs, Wikipedia is more accurate than Encyclopedia Britannica.
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Biographies and politics have sabotage (not errors).
The writer Orson Scott Card said that his biography had numerous errors that he corrected and they were reverted. It probably isn't 'sabotage' in his case - so it is probably both.
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I have no doubt that some of it swings the other way where celebrities want to deny controversial truths as well, but it's hard to kno
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It depends on how deranged you are. Conservapedia has a long list of things it thinks is wrong with Wikipedia, for example: https://www.conservapedia.com/... [conservapedia.com]
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Yeah, probably... Conservapedia is full of Christian dogma and so is Russia.
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They ought to call that site ``Whineopedia''.
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Wow, the bizarro superman universe from Seinfeld, you've found it!!!
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This post was a bit of a test to see if any fans would mod me troll. If you actually read that site it's pretty batshit. A lot of the arguments stem from Christian texts and fairly literal interpretations.
These are the people who are supposed to be moderating posts on Slashdot.
Re: hmmmm (Score:3)
A bit of a test?
You mean flamebait in combination with the 5 minutes of hate and virtue signaling.
It is quite obvious, sitting at +3, that the marxists cunts among the moderators outweigh the nazi cunts.
Thanks for the data!
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Holy shit that's hilarious:
#1:
Wikipedia's articles on genocide,[10] murder,[11] and homicide[12] have absolutely no mention of abortion,[13] even though it has killed more people than any other genocide.
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Hmmm...well, you have to understand that gender identities are sexual catnip for theocratic kooks.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Duh! Genetic mutations.
According to the theory of evolution, all sexes are the result of genetic mutations. QED, while hermaphrodites are the result of mutation, males and females are equally such.
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Humans also have two heights: short and tall. ...
Humans also have two builds: skinny and fat.
Completely non sequitur analogies.
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Please explain how it is non-sequitur? Or better yet, tell me this: Is a heterosexual girl who dresses and acts like a tom boy masculine, or feminine in gender? Provided there are only two choices, you should have no problem explaining which is appropriate.
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Well, according to wikipedia [wikipedia.org]:
But, that doesn't stop me from referencing wikipedia to back up my posts. As I just did. Because even though it is not reliable, it is usually surprising reliable.
Usually.
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Yeah, Wikipedia is pretty good for a lot of basic facts stuff. For anything vaguely controversial, it's best to treat it kind of like Twitter for current news stories. I.e., a decent place to start, but you should never end there.
I don't see a problem with Russia making their own free encyclopedia. I'm sure it will be barely disguised propaganda, but for all I know the Russian version of Wikipedia is a wasteland of junk. I don't speak or read Russian, so I have no idea.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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Wikipedia is usually accurate except when it comes to "controversial" topics
If those topics are "controversial", how do you know it's not accurate? If you knew it wouldn't be controversial.
Facts vs topics (Score:3)
It's easy to look at AOC's Twitter feed and see whether or not this is true:
AOC said that she was fighting to keep Amazon from building an HQ in New York *because she wanted to instead use the money that Amazon would granted in deferred (delayed) property taxes to hire firefighters and teachers*.
AOC is a controversial figure. An article on AOC would be a controversial topic. That fact I the article is readily verifiable.
She either did or did not think that having Amazon NOT build in New York would cause t
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Similarly, you look at UK Home Office stats and see violent crime, rape, and murder roughly double as soon as the gun ban was instituted. Gun laws are a controversial topic, the fact that 70,000 rapes per year is a lot more than 30,000 isn't really subject to debate.
Crap, and not just that, crap of the type you rarely find even on Wikipedia .
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Putin isn't remotely interested in truth, and comes from a country that until recently was a communist hellhole,
Tell us more about this communist country with currency and a class system.
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Tell us more about this communist country with currency and a class system.
The USSR had currency and a class system. Not many countries don't.
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The USSR had currency and a class system. Not many countries don't.
QED, it was not communist, by definition. And it wasn't trying to be, either. It was socialist, to the extent even that was true.
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QED, it was not communist, by definition.
By that definition OTOH, I don't think such a country has ever existed. Nor will it.
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By that definition OTOH, I don't think such a country has ever existed. Nor will it.
I don't think such a country has ever existed either, and I doubt that one ever will exist unless we invent the replicator, and thereby transition to a truly post-scarcity existence. And I'm not holding my breath for that, either. I strongly suspect we'll extinguish ourselves before we have a chance to get that far. Consider how much waste we have in our current existence, and that there is more than enough food, water, and housing to serve every human on the planet, yet people still go without all of those
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Some "scrip" used for exchange is necessary for all economic systems (except bartering) including communism
No, it is not. You don't need to keep track of who gets what under communism, because everyone is assigned goods not according to their desires or to the amount of work they do, but based on their needs.
Awaiting the "not troo socialism" argument now...
Socialism isn't automatically good. We have plenty of socialist programs in American government, some good, some bad. But Russia has clearly never actually been communist. It has however been socialist.
Re:hmmmm (Score:5, Informative)
Citation? All the research I've seen puts Wikipedia as, on average, more reliable than any of the traditional paper encyclopedias. Often less reliable for political hot-button topics where edit wars are common, but generally considerably more accurate for everything else.
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Citation? All the research I've seen puts Wikipedia as, on average, more reliable than any of the traditional paper encyclopedias. Often less reliable for political hot-button topics where edit wars are common, but generally considerably more accurate for everything else.
So, tell me when exactly is Hitler going to become a not-so-hot-button topic of discussion? How about the Iraq war and WMD? Or perhaps the 2016 election? How often will we allow many people to literally re-write history on the "more reliable" source? How many lies will be cemented as truth simply because a fact checker got tired of the editing battle?
Sorry, but I fail to see how any part of Wikipedia could be more reliable than books in print. And if you fail to see the value of political history remai
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Wikipedia may fluctuate - but when printed resources are wrong, they stay that way.
At least with wikipedia it's easy to tell if an article is controversial (though it would be nice if there was a prominent notification for articles that are in substantial flux)
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What makes books in print magically better? Holocaust Deniers have books in print. And working for an encyclopedia company doesn't make your biases magically disappear. Are you suggesting that the old Soviet Encyclopedias have more accurate information on a hot-button topic like Hitler or Stalin than heavily edit-protected pages on Wikipedia?
There's nothing magical about print books that makes those that work on them without bias. There's no perfect source of information. And at least Wikipedia article
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Well he is right, Wikipedia is horribly unreliable and a really poor source of information (unless you are verifying the information from other sources, thus making it redundant). I wish there was a single good site/source for information and would love to see something replace Wikipedia, but nothing usable will come from any government let alone Russia.
The irony of us wishing there was a replacement for the thing that fucking replaced the encyclopedia, also known as that single good source for information that modern societies used for a couple thousand years before the internet came along.
It's funny how every now and then our modernized ignorance shines through like a turd on fire.
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maybe 150 to 200 years.
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>that modern societies used for a couple thousand years before the internet came along. maybe 150 to 200 years.
Modern society definitions aside, it is Wikipedia reporting that "Encyclopedias have existed for around 2,000 years and have evolved considerably during that time"
If Wikipedia is wrong, then it only confirms my point.
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Naturalis Historia was an encyclopedia that was written 2,000 years ago. So now what does that make YOU? Wrong. It makes you wrong. Glad I could help.
I was the one who originally stated that we've been using encyclopedias for "a couple thousand years before the internet came along", which someone else tried to state encyclopedias have been in use for "maybe 150 to 200 years."
You're doing nothing but confirming my original statement. So now what does that make YOU? Someone who has a comprehension problem.
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Naturalis Historia was an encyclopedia that was written 2,000 years ago.
I'll bet some of it is wrong too.
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Naturalis Historia was an encyclopedia that was written 2,000 years ago.
I'll bet some of it is wrong too.
Very true, but ensuring history is documented accurately is one thing.
Preventing society from modifying or even eradicating any part of history, is a completely different problem, and one born in the age of humans trusting shit like the Wikipedia editing system.
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also known as that single good source for information that modern societies used for a couple thousand years before the internet came along.
Ahh - but note there wasn't a SINGLE encyclopedia. There were multiple encyclopedias each with their own interpretation of events.
A monopoly on history and data (which is effectively what Wikipedia is) even objective will have certain facts and stories removed as "not relevant" let alone have misinformation in the actual published articles (controversial or not)
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also known as that single good source for information that modern societies used for a couple thousand years before the internet came along.
Ahh - but note there wasn't a SINGLE encyclopedia. There were multiple encyclopedias each with their own interpretation of events.
The very definition of an encyclopedia insinuates that they are used to create a compendium of knowledge on a particular field or discipline, which that alone would imply there are many encyclopedias, but perhaps only one or two that stand out as THE reference on a particular topic.
A monopoly on history and data (which is effectively what Wikipedia is) even objective will have certain facts and stories removed as "not relevant" let alone have misinformation in the actual published articles (controversial or not)
I'm not sure what you're attempting to convey here other than confirming my original point. Wikipedia is FAR from a reliable source because of the editing capability. I'm certainly not saying that traditional encyclopedias wer
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Well he is right, Wikipedia is horribly unreliable and a really poor source of information (unless you are verifying the information from other sources, thus making it redundant).
Checking the sources of a general article on a subject is not redundant, it is a very common way to do in-depth research on the subject. (If you went to college and did not figure this out, I am sorry for all the time you could have saved).
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That's not research, that's regurgitation.
Unless you're dealing with primary sources (or data you collected from experiments you ran, etc.), you're not doing research. You're merely reading someone else's opinion.
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That's not research, that's regurgitation.
Unless you're dealing with primary sources (or data you collected from experiments you ran, etc.), you're not doing research. You're merely reading someone else's opinion.
Good point! I should have given it more thought or at least been clearer in what I was saying.
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Seems that if R&T measured the weight of that car, then that data is a primary source. If they cited the manufacturer's data, then that's not. but lots of sources are primary. As many as possible. Some can't be primary (cited), as the primary is locked behind a paywall, but summaries by those who paid to see over the wall are as close as Wikipedia can cite, and often the uncitable p
Re:hmmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
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Only in biographies and political subjects does it break down, where someone has money to gain by painting a false picture.
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Wikipedia is a great source. But, like any source, it has to be used appropriately or it is useless. Wikipedia is one of the rare fulfillments of the promise of what all the optimists about the internet had hoped it would become. If people concerned about vaccines went to Wikipedia instead of Facebook for information we wouldn't have that dumb controversy. But Wikipedia has a bad reputation among idiots. You hear things like, "You don't know who puts stuff on there" even though there are citations. And then
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A single one makes no sense at all. What should happen is what they are doing in Russia but the encyclopaedia should be linked to all universities for article contributions and hosting shared between countries. Still each country should host their own, favouring their own universities and then linking beyond that from country to country, depending upon articles available and for use with multiple languages. A common sense thing to do and one that should have been done a long time ago.
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I am pretty sure it is the MOST reliable of all the information resources. I seem to remember a study comparing Wikipedia to Encyclopedia Britannica and a few others, Wikipedia was tied at the top. Sure it is subject to misinformation but that is quickly rooted out and replaced with correct information. John Oliver did a show on this.
In the day and age of lies going viral faster than HFT in front of a gullible audience, I challenge you to eliminate the painfully obvious problem of spreading disinformation using Wikipedia.
Is someone being paid to support an SLA for Wikipedia accuracy? If not, then it's far from the MOST reliable when anyone the planet can modify the content.
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I am pretty sure it is the MOST reliable of all the information resources. I seem to remember a study comparing Wikipedia to Encyclopedia Britannica and a few others, Wikipedia was tied at the top. Sure it is subject to misinformation but that is quickly rooted out and replaced with correct information. John Oliver did a show on this.
In the day and age of lies going viral faster than HFT in front of a gullible audience, I challenge you to eliminate the painfully obvious problem of spreading disinformation using Wikipedia.
Is someone being paid to support an SLA for Wikipedia accuracy? If not, then it's far from the MOST reliable when anyone the planet can modify the content.
What is HFT and SLA? Hint: STOP USING ACRONYMS ON A GENERAL DISCUSSION SITE!!!!
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As a collaborative tool wikipedia worked very well indeed. As soon as special interests are involved it is mediocre. But then so is the mainstream press.
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*citation needed
Re:hmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Two days ago some Bernie Bro added this piece of dreck [wikipedia.org]. Wikipedia use to delete that sort of crap on sight, but the place has been subsumed by nazi-punching groupthinkers and so it remains; the supposed deletion won't occur; the people behind it are the correct thinking good folk that get the benefit of the doubt in all things. Ask yourself how many milliseconds a "Media Bias Against Donald Trump" article would exist before it was purged and whomever was responsible was permabanned.
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old news [salon.com]
more old news [washingtonexaminer.com]
It was rigged. Get over it.
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You don't think there's been media bias?
There has obviously been media bias. Prevailing media bias and not permitting Wikipedia to become another online political cesspit are two aspects of reality that can exist simultaneously. The people that have been responsible for the governance of Wikipedia understood this, but they have surrendered to the Resistance and now Wikipedia is shitting the bed.
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You don't think there's been media bias? Why was Trump even covered, he was never credible or suitable as a candidate or as a human being. Answer: Because corporate interests put sensational ratings above journalistic duty or social responsibility. Why is there so much cover of political has-been Biden, despite being politically stillborn, standing next to lively liberal candidates like some undead zombie? Why haven't people woken up and realized our electoral system is in an abjectly failed and non-credible state?
Negative media attention is still media attention, and it's very well documented how in some cases, negative attention can actually increase one's successes. The media was and still is in love with Trump, and the reason why is simple: Even people who hate him love hearing about him, which gives journalists job security. Really on any given Trump topic, there are probably a hundred or so articles, even on all of the mainstream sources, that are just reworded versions of one another. Every now and then when I
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You can thank Phyllis Schlafly and her dropped-on-his-head son for that whole mess. Good for a few laughs though
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I tried trolling that when it was new. Got myself banned for claiming that the speed of light relative to the observer is a constant, as the head editor believes it must have been faster in the past, otherwise it would be impossible to see more than six thousand light-years.
I gave up shortly after that. When the non-trolling pages are seriously claiming that Adolf Hitler and most of the Nazi party leadership were secretly a cabal of homosexuals, how can I possibly make up something crazier than that?
Putin's gonna have his own Wikipedia (Score:2)
With blackjack and hookers!
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Them and horses, he's big on riding horsies with no shirt on (him, not the horsies). It makes him feel like he's not 5' 6". When he's on a horse, he imagines it to be a unicorn. I'll let you fill in from your imagination from where the horn comes. The rest of us just imagine the unicorn is pink.
We need one too (Score:2)
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Agreed, I was having very obvious *grammar* edits reverted in seconds/minutes the other day. It was not debatable. there were misplaced commas that is wrong in any version of english, no explanation given. I have had quoted text "anglicized" by changing the spelling to the British version - on a quote by an American about an American topic.
They removed photos I took, licensed, and posted *myself* due to "copyright violation" or some such on another page. One idiot "reverted" text I didn't write, the
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Agreed, I was having very obvious *grammar* edits reverted in seconds/minutes the other day. It was not debatable. there were misplaced commas that is wrong in any version of english, no explanation given. I have had quoted text "anglicized" by changing the spelling to the British version - on a quote by an American about an American topic.
there were -> There were
that is wrong -> That are wrong
english -> English
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Notability cops are the worst. You can find entire, lengthy, in-universe, character bios on even one-shot characters on any Japanese anime show without a peep. Post a bio of a *real person* with real-life accomplishments, and down come the notability cops to claim that his person is trivial.
Putinpedia! (Score:2)
Coming to the web near you!
Politically driven Wikipedia replacement? (Score:2)
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However if this newer effort forces some people to accept some basic ground truths about Communism (and socialism) then that would be a net gain for the world, as long as the government spin on other matters doesn't do too much damage beyond that.
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Already named. (Score:2)
They already picked out a name for it: Pravdapedia
Slashdot, I am disappoint. (Score:5, Funny)
9 posts and not one of them begins In Soviet Russia. Come on people! There hasn't been a richer meme target on this site in years! Here here, I'll start...
In Soviet Russia, Encyclopedia looks up YOU!
Yeah ok, pretty weak. What can I say, I'm not a 15 year old memelord.
The bad people... (Score:2)
Always want to silence others. And they will use any excuse to do it. State Secrets, National Security, Privacy, & the new ones... "Fake News" & of course "Hate Speech".
They will always result in suppression of a peoples voice, because that is 100% always the intended effect. Period, end of discussion!
I mean, he's not wrong, right? (Score:2)
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How many of us know people that screw up wikipedia entries just because they're bored?
I don't know anyone who does that. Your acquaintances have too much time on their hands.
How can any source of information that anyone can screw up at will, be considered correct or reliable?
The moderators lock the really controversial topics. If I print a bunch of lies, stamp "Oxford University Press" on it, and then bind the pages with glue, would you consider it to be a reliable source? Sources are not binary—they do not just have a value of true or false. No matter how seemingly reliable a source is, you're still responsible for assessing the validity of its claims.
Alt Headline: (Score:2)
"Russia to copy Wikipedia, remove a few negative articles, Republish under another name"
Real question - will it emulate Wikipedia (Score:2)
Russia is leaving Wikipedia? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Must be why Wikipedia is in such a panic! I looked at an article there earlier today and saw the biggest banner begging for money that I've ever seen on their website. It took up half the screen and was begging how $2.75 from everyone could fund the website for years and all we'd have to do was give up a single coffee. I scrolled down and a new scrolling ad replaced it at the top of the screen. Got rid of that and scrolled down... and a new scrolling ad appeared at the bottom of the screen.
Oh wait, t
This ought to be a hoot. (Score:2)
The Russians will claiming that they invented [fill-in-the-blank]. It'll be like listening to Chehov on the original Star Trek.
George Orwell Said (Score:2)
I guess Putin is in control of the present.
Russian wikipedia... (Score:2)
English articles are good, even very accurate. Other languages... well... forget it, just tell them to learn English.
Anton Chekov is already hard at work (Score:2)
He's writing the history of that great Russian innovation - quatro-triticale.
rootin' fer pootin (Score:2)
Current vs ultimate verified accuracy? (Score:2)
The thing I find great about Wikipedia is knowing it's updated practically in "real time". If there's a new discovery or a new product or anything like that, you can bet there are people interested enough in it to come along and add the information about it to Wikipedia in short order.
Back in the days of the traditional printed encyclopedia volumes, you had to replace the whole massive set of them every so many years, or they'd be too outdated to do anything except provide historical information. And even I
Pravda (Score:2)
It's worth remembering that in Russia pravda means both "the truth" and "the official word (on the matter)". Rather like "Maat" in Pharaonic Egypt.
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At least now Fox News will have an easier time sourcing their information.
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Oh come on, that was uncalled for. Fox News doesn't need to source their information.
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I don't really see that. Wikipedia is far from perfect, but it's stayed pretty robust and generally reliable.
That's exactly why Putin doesn't like it.