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Posts Tagged ‘Jimmy Wales’

Wikipedia Turns 10, Looks Forward to Next Decade

Wikipedia turned 10 years old Jan. 15. Jimmy Wales said Wikipedia’s goal will be international expansion to facilitate the consumption of content to more diverse readers. – Against extraordinary odds, Wikipedia turned 10 years old
Jan. 15, celebrating a decade of providing free information about almost any topic
conceivable.
Wikipedia, managed by the non-profit Wikimedia
Foundation, launched by Jimmy Wales in 2001 as a project to allow volunteer
editors to contri…


User-generated content: Wikipleadia

The promise and perils of crowdsourcing content

IT MAY not stir up international outrage like its semi-namesake WikiLeaks, but Wikipedia sparks debate. The free online encyclopedia, which celebrates its tenth birthday on January 15th, is a symbol of unpaid collaboration and one of the most popular destinations on the internet, attracting some 400m visitors a month. It also faces serious charges of elitism.

Wikipedia offers more than 17m articles in 270 languages. Every day thousands of people edit entries or add new ones in return for nothing more than the satisfaction of contributing to the stock of human knowledge. Wikipedia relies on its users’ generosity to fill its coffers as well as its pages. Recent visitors to the website were confronted with images of Jimmy Wales, a co-founder (pictured), and a request for donations. The campaign was annoying but effective, raising $16m in 50 days. …

Wikipedia’s Wales Scales Back Founder Flag After Angering Editors

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales has given up his rights to block users, delete pages or protect pages on the online encyclopedia he helped build after drawing the ire of editors who felt he overstepped his bounds by yanking images he deemed pornographic from Wikimedia Commons. More than 300 Wikipedia editors signed this petition complaining about Wales’ actions. The hullabaloo started when Wales deleted and facilitated the deletion of thousands of images that some deemed pornographic, including images with children. – <p>Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales has given up his rights
to block users, delete pages or protect pages on the online encyclopedia he
helped build after drawing the ire of editors who felt he overstepped his
bounds. </p>
<p>The hullabaloo, which Wales downplayed in tweets to the media, started…


‘iPods won’t end dictatorship’

The TEDGlobal conference began its second day with views of the internet as a fragile network running on the kindness of strangers and as a force for spin and repression

The second day of the TEDGlobal conference in Oxford began with contrasting optimistic and pessimistic views of the internet.

Internet: The fragile but functional network of people

Jonathan Zittrain, who recently wrote the cautionary book The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It, decided to paint an optimistic view of the internet and its future.

Discussing the creators of the internet, he said that they built the foundation for this global network despite facing a huge difficulty:

[They had no money to build it] but they had an amazing freedom. They didn’t have to make any money from it. The internet has no business plan. There is no firm responsible for building it. 

In many ways, the internet should not work. As late as 1992, IBM said that it wasn’t possible to build a corporate network using internet protocol.

Zittrain said the mascot of the internet is the bumble bee. It shouldn’t be able to fly, but a recently government-funded programme discovered how bees fly: They flap their wings really fast.

The internet works on a process that Zittrain compared to passing a beer to a person in a mosh pit. “This system relies on kindness and trust. This makes [the internet] rare and vulnerable.”

Wikipedia also shouldn’t work, according to Zittrain. “Wikipedia is an idea so profoundly stupid that even Jimbo [Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales] didn’t have it,” he said. Wikipedia was originally a way for editors of another project, Newpedia, to collaborate. But the backroom eventually took over the front room.

He showed how Wikipedians debate issues, and said that they are making their own law democratically. They decided to remove the real name of the boy who appeared in the Star War Kid YouTube video after his parents requested it.

“At all times Wikipedia is 45 minutes away from utter destruction. It’s a thin geeky line that keeps it going,” Zittrain said.

He believes that the lessons of how the internet works can applied to real world and also back to the technology of the internet itself.

I think that we can build architectures online so that such human requests are easier online. It represents human emotion, endeavour and impact. We can decide how we want to treat it.

Why iPods won’t topple dictators

From that optimistic view, Evgeny Morozov countered some of the cyber-utopian ideas that the internet, new media and technology were an unalloyed force for good and democracy.

Morozov, who is from Belarus, worked for an NGO using new media to promote democracy, but he found:

Dictatorships do not crumble so easily. Some get even more repressive.

He started studying how the internet could impede democracy. Cyber-utopians believe that with enough connectivity and devices that democracy will inevitably follow, he said. It was an assumption that underlies what he called “iPod liberalism” that everyone who owns an iPod must be a liberal.

If you believe ‘Drop iPods, not bombs’, the problem is that it confuses the intended versus actual uses of technology.

Governments are learning that censorship doesn’t work but spin does. They are actually encouraging people to share information online. Blogs, Twitter and Facebook actually allowed the Iranian authorities to gather open-source intelligence on networks of anti-government activists.

The KGB used to torture people for weeks to get that information.

Also, he said that while many assume that technology is a catalyst for change, it might also be an opiate for the masses. Governments can engage in meaningless exercises that allow their citizens to believe they have a voice when the exercise itself is meaningless or it gives a government a scapegoat – the public – if the policy fails.

For technology to really be an agent for change, he said we need to stop thinking about computers per capita and start thinking about empowering NGOs and other members of society.

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