Why Wikipedia Must Jettison Its Anti-Elitism

Ultimately, it became very clear that the most active and influential members of the project–beginning with Jimmy Wales, who hired me to start a free encyclopedia project and who now manages Wikipedia and Wikimedia–were decidedly anti-elitist in the above-described sense.

Consequently, nearly everyone with much expertise but little patience will avoid editing Wikipedia, because they will–at least if they are editing articles on articles that are subject to any sort of controversy–be forced to defend their edits on article discussion pages against attacks by nonexperts. This is not perhaps so bad in itself. But if the expert should have the gall to complain to the community about the problem, he or she will be shouted down (at worst) or politely asked to “work with” persons who have proven themselves to be unreasonable (at best).

This lack of respect for expertise explains the first problem, because if the project participants had greater respect for expertise, they would have long since invited a board of academics and researchers to manage a culled version of Wikipedia (one that, I think, would not directly affect the way the main project is run). But because project participants have such a horror of the traditional deference to expertise, this sort of proposal has never been taken very seriously by most Wikipedians leading the project now. And so much the worse for Wikipedia and its reputation. —Why Wikipedia Must Jettison Its Anti-Elitism (Kuro5hin)

One of the creators of Wikipedia reflects on some of the serious flaws of the mass-edited encyclopedia.

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  • I wonder if there are any wikis out there with substantial content and significant site traffic that are edited only by a select group of experts. Does the software WikiMedia allow for this option? I've often thought of starting such a site, perhaps as part of Palimpsest.

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Dennis G. Jerz

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