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Didn't know that, and thanks for the heads up. But not being a Wiki fan (you couldn't tell, could you?) I wouldn't have stumbled across it anyway, given I never darken the gateways of Wikipedia.Well the main reason I posted this is because apparently it is so full of porn.
Didn't know that, and thanks for the heads up. But not being a Wiki fan (you couldn't tell, could you?) I wouldn't have stumbled across it anyway, given I never darken the gateways of Wikipedia.
I meant, I did not know that before I read the OP. I couldn't have fed off the article you linked if I hadn't read the OP, ya know?It is the title of the article in the op.
For the same reason that getting information from NASA or the JPL about how to launch an earth-orbit payload would be better than asking the guy down the street. Credentials, credibility, and proven knowledge. Those aren't the kind of people contributing to Wikipedia, or any "wiki" for that matter. The opinion expressed that there is a difference between Wikipedia and any other wiki is like saying there is a difference between the desert two miles inside southeastern Utah and the desert two miles inside southwestern Colorado -- the only difference is their location.Why does knowing the general age base or that it might come from someone next to you somehow make it less credible?
No, but there are qualified academics with the education, knowledge and credentials to speak authoritatively to their areas of expertise. Those people write papers that are peer reviewed, proven scientifically or mathematically, and are then published, with such papers being the source material for the information that shows up in Britannica or other respected published collections of knowledge. That is as opposed to the people contributing to a "wiki" who don't necessarily have those credentials, and certainly don't have to prove they are credible and qualified to speak with authority on the subject they choose to post on the service. Being able to read is not an adequate qualification. You have to interpret what you read, and most contributors to these online sites barely have that as a qualification. Wikis are jokes, and no one should expect them to be credible, authoritative, or even truthful, because they are none of those things.There isn't some mysterious human with a giant brain and giant glasses hovering over the internet somewhere creating reliable sources for the world, magically accredited by only the top five brainiacs of the world.![]()
If I have NO idea what something is and want a quick overview (like if someone posted about something called twerking and I didn't know what it was), I'd go to wiki although I take the info with a grain of salt. That's about all i use it for - it's fast and easy. For real info though, I'll use other sources.
The LADIES on Fox News Channel are no worse, and in most cases much better, than the women on other cable news networks, in that respect.Second - when Fox News decide to have the females ( I hesitate to use the term lady) on its TV news show wear more modest clothing, I might take the OP more seriously.
Few and far between. And one thing I didn't mention is the fact the wikis don't require anyone to be qualified to do anything. Try suggesting you write an article for Encyclopedia Britannica without credentials and see how far you get. Sorry, Gina, wikis are worthless. Nothing will change that.Sometimes the guy or girl down the street or next door, living in the mouse infested apartment, is perfectly qualified. The writers have to live somewhere, right? :thumbs: