Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2009-04-06/In the news
Wikia Search abandoned, university plagiarism, and more
Wikia Search shut down by Jimbo Wales
University takes steps to stop plagiarism from Wikipedia
In "University confronts cheats in the age of Wikipedia", the Edmonton Journal reports that the problem of students plagiarizing from Wikipedia has prompted the University of Alberta to take steps to stop such academic dishonesty. Students who need help with their writing can go to the campus Centre for Writing. Other teachers are giving proper instruction on how to properly cite sources, to prevent confusion about quoting vs. stealing.
New Zealand minister questioned
On April 2, the Minister of Internal Affairs of New Zealand, Richard Worth, was questioned about whether he had edited his own Wikipedia article and asked whether he intended "to take the advice Wikipedia gave him yesterday afternoon that he should consult Wikipedia’s conflict of interest guidelines?" This was apparently related to edits made in December 2008 and March 2009, which are discussed in a post dated April 1 on talk:Richard Worth. The story was picked up by TVNZ, with no mention of the age of the edits.
Briefly
- An edit by a New Zealand user made an unreferenced claim, as MI6.co.uk reported: "Wikipedia entry lists Iain Softley as Bond 23 director".
- Oliver Kamm opines in The First Post that the consensus system that Wikipedia uses is anti-intellectual and that while "some of its articles effectively mimic the language of scholarly reference [,t]he venture is junk [and] much of its content is a pile of dross."Knowledge by consensus is Wikipedia's downfall.
- In "Wikipedia's Old-Fashioned Revolution", an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal, L. Gordon Crovitz argues that "Wikipedia is quietly transforming itself into a hybrid of amateurs and professionals" and that its "research principles are as traditional as its operating model is revolutionary".
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