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learned about the world through the stories in daily newspapers. Not only did you need to catch it the day it was published â unless, for some reason, you clipped the story â there was no way to go back. Hard facts were only what you captured in your memory, and when people debated what had happened a week or a year or half a decade ago, the only verification was what you remembered.
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a world *without* Knowledge, and who think it is *normal* for web searches for gigantic companies to show
Knowledge's page about them on the first screen. I've seen people and companies *beg* to have Knowledge pages about them and others who assume that everything that web searches have about them *comes* from Knowledge.
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disinformation, itâs also the place where the quality and reliability of sources is debated with more commitment and enthusiasm than anywhere else Iâm aware of. Itâs far from perfect, it may not even be good enough, but in aggregate, itâs probably the best hope for non-specialists looking for accurate information.
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My account will be old enough to vote in April 2023. I haven't become an administrator, I've stayed a little more focused on
Fraternities and Sororities. I've recently run into editors who are younger than my account, born after April 1995. It is fascinating to deal with editors who have never known
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My perceptions of what was available changed once I went to university, and later to grad school. But even though I knew so much more was available, it still wasnât accessible. A journal database search was something you needed to request. And whether you read it in a book or a journal, your ability
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gave amateurs the ability to document what experts said without having to decide which experts were correct. The techno-utopian view that we might be above these debates between scholars makes sense until you realize that you need some way to distinguish between the serious scholars and the cranks.
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Eighteen years after I first registered my account on the
English Knowledge, Iâm amazed at what the project has become. When I started contributing to Knowledge it was at the front lines of "post-truth politics". Today, not only is it one of the most important sources to combat misinformation and
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The
Internet changed things, but not always for the better. My first decade online (1994 to 2004) saw the birth of the World Wide Web and the rise of the search engine. Though it was growing explosively, the content that was online represented only a sliver of human knowledge. You could find all
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Iâve been a
Wikipedian for 18 years. Were it a person, on Friday August 26, my account will be old enough to vote. Over the years, my role has changed from new user to administrator, from pure volunteer to that strange dual role of volunteer editor and Wiki Education staffer. In the last year I
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So many
Wikipedians' origin stories include an encyclopĂŚdia â maybe bought by parents making a significant financial sacrifice, or an older edition purchased at a garage sale. For me, it was different. I grew up, not just in a world where knowledge was scarce, but also where it was fleeting. I
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meant that these websites developed more of an identity. The bloggerâs creed â I link, therefore I am â meant each blogger was a window onto a world of other sites, often less popular, less widely read, but more likely to be written by an expert. But these were also the days of the Bush
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experienced an odd identity crisis when the edit count of my work account surpassed that my volunteer account. While my activity waxed and waned over the years, the drive to contribute â to make the internet better by making free knowledge widely available â has remained a constant.
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Hmm. My account turned 18 back in
October 2020, & no I'm not the most senior active editor here. (There are a few more around, quietly lurking in the shadows. I guess we all need to get a life.) My memoirs about my tenure here would be notably less optimistic. --
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Knowledge is in general far too reluctant to take a critical look either at the state of
Knowledge's content or the capabilities of editors. This article is yet more of the standard rosy picture.
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kinds of weird and wonderful facts online, but finding the same website twice might be a challenge. And whether to trust this arcanum was an open question.
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This was the state of the world when I began to contribute to
Knowledge. The old ethos of "write what you know" was crashing into not just a strengthening
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to access a fact depended on the quality of the notes you had taken, and on how well you organized the slips of paper that you worked from.
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To make matters worse, members of the community might support the cranks, or worse yet â you might be the one who believes the cranks.
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administration and their "post-truth politics". Bloggers were some of the few to challenge the alleged rationale for the
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Over those years, Knowledge has changed dramatically, as has the knowledge environment in which it is embedded.
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In a world like this, with
Knowledge on the rise, knowledge was still fragile. The
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The community eventually figured out a lot of this. Addenda like the "
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The early 2000s brought further changes. The rise of Web 2.0 and the
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18 years a Wikipedian: what it means to me: Change and stability.
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Ian Ramjohn, Wiki Educationâs Senior Knowledge Expert
429:If your comment has not appeared here, you can try
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178:on August 26, 2022 (licensed CC BY-SA 3.0).
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306:31 August 2022
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