Wikipedia:Wikipedia may or may not be failing
This is an essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
This page in a nutshell: What is going on? And why should we care? |
Is
Is the mere fact that it exists on the scale it does an indication of success? Does the redistributability of its content ensure that, one way or another, it can never fail? Or does the malignant outcome of a few webcomic AfDs and the decision to make things difficult for spammers mean that the entire project is the birthchild of Satan, as many bloggers would have us believe?
Does "
Is Wikipedia's aim to become "Britannica-or-better" quality hopelessly unattainable? Or, given that most of the Micropædia articles are a couple of paragraphs long with no authors or references, and the Macropædia has only 700 articles, has it already been attained? Is 6,804,116 articles too many, or too few? Is this metric a misleading one? What about the average length of the article? Average number of edits? Median number of minor edits per page move? Which is better – lies, damned lies, or statistics?
How reliable is Wikipedia? Has the number of elephants tripled in the last three months? If I pick a random statement from a random article, will it be true, or will it be truthy? Is it appropriate to cite Wikipedia? Is it appropriate to cite any encyclopedia? Is it appropriate to rely on anything in Wikipedia at all, ever? Do thousands of graduate students owe their degrees to it nevertheless?
Is the unevenness of Wikipedia's coverage unacceptable? Does it matter that
Is
Is Wikipedia confusing to newcomers? Is it hostile to outsiders? Perplexing to those not in the "inner circle"? Do experienced editors give the impression they don't care because secretly, it's just as confusing for them? Is it impossible to add information to Wikipedia without the "abusive mods" removing it? Or is this a misconception derived from the experiences of those with extreme viewpoints who attempt to rewrite controversial articles without discussing the matter with other users? Do we really care what someone who blanks an article and writes "penis" thinks of the project anyway?
Are all our articles written by high-school kids with no knowledge of the subject? Is this a bad thing? Or has Wikipedia inadvertently done something rather impressive – taken the millions of kid-hours of spare time that these people would otherwise have wasted on video games and MySpace, and actually put it to productive use? Is the project run by abusive, power-mad adolescents? Or is this an unfair generalization from the inevitable disruptive few? Is it really worth it when editors, driven mad by content disputes, threaten to climb the Reichstag dressed as Spider-Man? Is there a cabal? If so, does it exist? Can I be in it?
Is Wikipedia about to run out of funding and close down? Or did the accountant miss a zero off the last fiscal report? Will the Foundation discover $1,000,000 down the back of the sofa some time in the next four months? Or will we have to resort to running ads on Wikipedia? Would it be in the spirit of the project to do so? Would it be idiotic not to do so? Would the benefits outweigh the drawbacks, or would it drive everyone away? How much of the money would I be getting?
Does any of this matter, in the grand scheme of things? Or does Wikipedia's massive user base mean that, short of drastic action, the project will find its own direction? Would it be better if, instead of writing these essays, we wrote more articles?
Questions, questions, questions. Feel free to add more perplexing questions that no two people are ever going to agree on as you see fit.
See also
- Wikipedia:About
- Wikipedia:Wikipedia is failing
- Wikipedia:Wikipedia is not failing
- Wikipedia:Wikipedia is a work in progress
- Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is
- Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not
- Wikipedia:Why Wikipedia is so great
- Wikipedia:Why Wikipedia is not so great
- Wikipedia:Evaluating Wikipedia as an encyclopedia
- meta:Conflicting Wikipedia philosophies