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A weekend of Wikimania
By IAN SANDS AND JESS MCCONNELL  |  August 11, 2006

060811_wiki_main
Lawrence Lessig addresses the crowd
This past weekend, Wikipedia held its second annual Wikimania Conference from Friday to Sunday in, of all places, the law buildings of one of the most exclusive institutions of higher learning in the world, Harvard University. An odd choice, given that Wikipedia was originally designed to discourage notions of privilege and entitlement that are traditionally associated with such institutions. In other words, in the Wiki world, one needn't a fancy degree to drop knowledge.

In keeping with this academic theme, the conference was styled as a series of talks given by a variety of people -- educators, programmers, librarians, PhD candidates, grad students. Talks were given appropriately long-winded titles like: "The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom" and "Sins of Omission? An Exploratory Evaluation of Wikipedia's Topical Coverage."

Despite the surroundings in which they found themselves, WIkipedians found plenty of other ways to contribute to the proceedings. There were people blogging on the event. Voluntary transcribers could be seen in just about every room, dutifully documenting each and every word spoken. Others captured the conference via audio and video streams. What follows, our account of two days of Wikimania.

Day 1.

Quality over quantity
9:10 am — Lights, carpets, mikes, rows of chairs. Laptops sprinkled liberally into the audience. Digital cameras, video cameras, cell phones; t-shirts, jeans, khaki pants, suits, Hawaiian shirts; name tags. Dudes.

Jimbo Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia, takes the podium and begins to outline plans for wikiversity, wikiwyg, WiktionaryZ, and wiki water bottles (just joking about the bottles).

He spends time advocating for “stable versions,” a hot-button issue in the Wikipedia community. The idea is to keep on-record entries that cannot be touched (vandals, beware). His words to the wise Wikipedians in attendance: quality over quantity. We have a lot of articles; it’s time to make them more accurate and readable.

Britannica vs. Wikipedia 
10:45 am — Surprise, surprise, Britannica doesn’t like the Wikis. But, for all the academics who thumb their noses at Wikipedia, who think its level of fact-mangling is rivaled only by Bush administration, get this: according to an article in Nature written by Jim Giles, for every three errors in Britannica, Wikipedia only has four — only four!

Giles explains that for his piece in Nature, he recruited scientists to compare 50 articles in Britannica to articles on the same subjects in Wikipedia. But slow down, Giles cautions calmly. Take it with a spoon of salt. This was a journalistic exercise, not scientific research. Apparently the folks at Britannica missed that distinction, and they’ve embarked on a balls-to-the-wall mission to discredit Giles's work since the storycame out this past winter. In a report refuting theNature article, Britannicans didn't pull any punches:

"Almost everything about the journal's investigation, from the criteria for identifying inaccuracies to the discrepancy between the article text and its headline, was wrong and misleading."

Giles laughs. "I have to say, this is just about the nicest thing anyone has ever said about my writing."

Empowered to produce
1:30 pm — After lunch, free-culture icon Lawrence Lessig takes the stand in Ames hall, and starts skimming across the history of the free labor movement.

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Related: Free culture: what it is, why it matters, Wikimania 2006 hits Cambridge, Stealing culture, More more >
  Topics: Ultimate Lists , Internet, Science and Technology, Technology,  More more >
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