Wikipedia’s Growth Secrets

Jimmy Wales assembled “a ragtag band of volunteers,” gave them tools for collaborating, and created , the self-organizing, self-correcting, never-finished encyclopedia of the future. Here, he explains how the collaborative approach works, and why it succeeds. Along the way, he debunks some controversies, explains the “neutral point-of-view policy” and why it is non-debatable; and details the Wikipedia governance model: a democracy with a bit of aristocracy and some monarchy thrown in.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2433228188257073902

About Jimmy Wales:
Jimmy Wales went from betting on interest rates and foreign-currency fluctuations (as an option trader) to betting on the willingness of people to share their knowledge. That’s how , imagined in 2001, became one of the most-referenced, most-used repositories of knowledge on the planet, with more than one million articles in English (compared with the Britannica’s 80,000) and hundreds of thousands in dozens of other languages, all freely available.

The “wiki” in the name refers to software that allows anyone with access to add, delete or edit entries. This has led to controversies about the reliability of the information, prompting the Foundation to set tighter rules for editors, while still keeping open-source. One thing is certain: will never be finished. In the meantime Wales has started working on , a wiki-style search engine.

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