- 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			
 How Wikipedia wooed and won the world
		
		
				
					
					
				
				
					
				
		
			
				
					
An encyclopedia that anybody can help to write – whether a pupil or a  professor? Encyclopedia entries which are updated from one minute to  the next? And all of that financed by reader donations? Ten years ago when online companies vanished almost as quickly as  they appeared, nobody thought that a reliable encyclopedia could go  online – without going bankrupt within a few months.
 
And yet, Wikipedia went online in January 2001 and not only became a  success, it became an indispensable tool for millions of users.
 
It is the story of success over conventional wisdom.
 
The two guys who founded the encyclopedia were an unconventional duo  to start with. Jimmy Wales, born in 1966, ran the Bomis.com online  portal, which got its revenues through men’s entertainment such as  sport, gossip – and naked babes.
 From those revenues, he steered start-up capital to Wikipedia.  Otherwise, he gave Larry Sanger a free hand. The two men had become  acquainted via online philosophical discussions.
 
Sanger, a philosopher born in 1968, became editor of Nupedia, from which emerged Wikipedia.
 Even Sanger did not believe that thousands of users could write an  encyclopedia. Strict standards applied to Nupedia, Wikipedia’s  predecessor. In principle, anybody could contribute. But they had to be  qualified experts in their field. And the editors generally had advanced  degrees in those fields, Sanger stressed in those days.
 
Each entry underwent seven checks – more than with a scientific  journal. The first entry – on atonality – was only uploaded after seven  long months of preparation. Just over 20 entries were available that  first year.
 “There must be a way to make it easier for users to participate,” Sanger said later.
 Wiki software came to the rescue by providing a free-accessible  system which allowed the user to access and edit web pages. All that was  needed was a browser.
 
So that the entries would not get mixed into Nupedia, Wales got a separate domain name. Thus, Jan 15, 2001, Wikipedia was born.
 It was only supposed to be a test. But within a month, there were  already 600 entries, which was more than Nupedia had. Within a year it  was 20,000 – to the astonishment of the founders.
 
Increasingly, Wikipedia entries topped Google search lists for any  given subject. Increasingly, people were turning to it for information.  It was not always reliable, not always well-written. But it was there,  instantly, at the click of a return button.
 Conventional encyclopedias could not compete.
 
By that time, Sanger was no longer editor. He had left Wikipedia in 2002 in a dispute over quality control.
 Wales remained – and since then is viewed as sole founder of the encyclopedia. But his company Bomis pulled out.
 In 2003 Wales founded the Wikimedia Foundation, moving all  intellectual property rights and domain names pertaining to Wikipedia to  the new foundation, whose purpose is to establish general policy for  the encyclopedia and its sister projects on a donor-funded basis.
 
The big question then and now is why thousands of authors spend their  own time crafting entries which do not bear their own names and which  later on may be totally rewritten by someone else – or deleted with a  mouse click.
 
“There is a certain appeal in compiling knowledge without the  limitations of copyrights,” says Christian Stegbauer, a German  sociologist who has written a book on the phenomenon called “Raetsel der  Kooperation” (The Riddle of Cooperation).
 Wikipedia authors are not so much interested in fame in the  conventional sense as they are in achieving a certain degree of renown  and respect within the Wikipedia community, says Stegbauer, a professor  of empirical social research at the University of Erfurt.
Keywords: today news, daily news, kerala news, special news, hot news,current news
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
				
			
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
		
		
		
	
 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	Tags for this Thread
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
			
				
				Posting Permissions
			
			
				
	
		- You may not post new threads
 
		- You may not post replies
 
		- You may not post attachments
 
		- You may not edit your posts
 
		-  
 
	
	
	Forum Rules
 
			 
		 
	 
 
  
   
  
 
	
 
Bookmarks