week8 - after reading

1.
The reliability of Wikipedia concerns the validity, verifiability, and verifiability of the user-generated editing model of Wikipedia, especially the English version. It is written and edited by a volunteer editor who generates online content under the editorial supervision of other volunteer editors through community generation policies and guidelines. Wikipedia has a common veto of "anyone can edit at any time" and maintains the threshold of "verifiability, not truth". This editorial model is highly concentrated because 77% of all articles are written by 1% of editors, many of whom are anonymous. Online encyclopedias have been criticized for their realistic reliability in content, presentation, and editing processes. Studies and surveys that attempt to measure Wikipedia's reliability have been mixed with diverse and inconsistent findings.



2.
It's a South American coat. In July 2008, a 17-year-old student named the "Brazilian aardbarks" in a Wikipedia article "Coati", adding a nickname invented as a personal joke. False information lasted for six years and was spread by hundreds of websites, several newspapers, and even several university newspapers.


3.
In Wikipedia, the inclusion of false or fabricated content continued for several years due to volunteer editing. As non-neutral or conflicting edits become commonplace and Wikipedia is used in "plural editing", it is becoming popular to insert false, biased or defamatory content in articles, especially biographies of living people, etc. In December 2005, Nature published the results of a blind study looking for a reviewer for the accuracy of a small subset of Wikipedia and Encyclopedia Britannica articles?


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