Presentation

From Cyberlaw: Difficult Issues Winter 2010
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Hello - we are Amanda, Bruno, Franny, Hector and Yosuke of the Cyberlaw: Difficult Problems course. Feedback from people who use and are familiar with Wikipedia/Wikimedia is an extremely important part of formulating our proposed solution, and we thank you for your interest and contributions. We only ask that you direct your comments and input to the other Future of Wikipedia pages, and allow us to use this Presentation page to create our final class presentation. We look forward to hearing from you!

Introduction

[Hector to expand]

  • Overview of other problems considered, including:
- governance
- community
- attribution
- technical infrastructure
- vandalism
- dispute resolution
  • Participation and interest phenomenon (harnessing the time and energy people are willing to devote to Wikipedia)

Selected Key Problems to Address

[Yosuke to expand]

1. Quality of content (e.g. factual errors on Wikipedia lowers the reliability and credibility of its content)
2. Wikipedia's editor base is decreasing (existing editors are losing interest and it is difficult to recruit new editors)
2.1 Deals with issues of:
- community
- motivations
- outreach and public relations

Different Perspectives on the Key Problems

[Bruno and Franny to expand]

  • Bridgespan
  • Wikimedia
  • Wikipedia Review
  • General public (Mechanical Turk responses)

Mturk2.jpg

1. Too many people are writing/editing the same article.
2. Limit the number of people who can work on one article at any given time, and lock down good articles that shouldn't be changed, or only give access to writers/editors that are trusted.
1. Some of the information presented is false.
2. A suggestion is to make the material go through a process where it is checked by individuals before it is posted.
1. The biggest problem is people can use anonymity to vandalize Wikipedia in both blatant and sneaky ways.
2. The best way to solve the problem is to ban anonymous edits and require a verified email address. This preserves the fundamental principle of allowing anyone to edit because anyone can get a free yahoo or hotmail account and use it to register. But it will deter a lot of the vandalism because signing up for a free email account and then registering a Wiki account is more trouble than it's worth if your intent is to vandalize (and get banned quickly). But if you want to make legitimate contributions, going through the process one time is only a minor inconvenience.
1. A lot of the information is false or inaccurate.
2. Have editors that check information before it is published.
1. People vandalising pages or putting unsourced information.
2. Only allowing trusted members to add content or edit information on wikipedia's pages
1. The ability for someone on a local computer to mess around and change words on the site.
2. Make the user register to post comments instead of just letting them post it. As for as myself concerned Wikipedia is on the right path and if somebody feels any hardship it will gradually be eliminated.
1. it is not considered a reliable source by educators
2. prove that the information is reliable so students will be able to use it for academic reasons
1. The biggest problem with Wikipedia is not being able to find the meanings to an given subject.
2. The solution is to make details more simpler for others to understand so that it will be easier for users to find the answers that they are seeking.
1. Sometimes you cannot trust the person who gives the information it provides.
2. The solution here is to have a background of the person who gave the information in Wikipedia.
1. The biggest problem with Wikipedia is that not all of the information is legitimate. Wikipedia is not a good source for papers and some of the information is false. Anyone can post information there.
2. You can solve the problem by having a team collaborate on user's information before it is posted.
1. People putting in information that is not correct, when they know it's not correct, but because they think it's funny/amusing.
2. Require information be checked by a second person before it's put into an article.
1. The main problem is answers are scattered.
2. By ordering it we can solve it.
1. The biggest problem with Wikipedia is that anyone can edit it.
2. I think that those who edit the information on the site should have some sort of qualification and it should be subject to review before being displayed.
1. The biggest problem is its trustworthyness. I'm never sure that I can trust the information on wikipeida.
2. This can be fixed by being more careful about putting in citations.
1. I think Wikipedia's lack of total credibility is its biggest problem. Many entries lack citations verifying the accuracy.
2. I think the problem can be solved by finding editors to check the accuracy of the entries made by people.
1. I think too many big information on a given topic. Information that is unnecessary for a common man.
2. Wikipedia can be made short perhaps a link for "advanced reading" given seperately and only the basic information in the main page.
1. The grammar and sentence structure is often wrong or confusing.
2. Use grammar check and make people edit the texts.
1. The biggest problem is some of it is more opinion than fact.
2. A way to solve this is just to have the writer mention facts, and not on opinion or speculation.
1. Using javascript (extensions/UsabilityInitiative/*) causes certain browsers (Mozilla 1.7) to crash.
2. Re-write scripts so that they work.
1: The biggest problem is that most of the articles lack references and professionalism.
2: One solution is not to allow just any user to edit or create an article with providing good and "quality" references first, and then having a professional to look over the article and make sure it meets high quality standards before being published.
1. I think the biggest problem with the current Wikipedia is that quite a few things, such as medical terms or conditions, are either not even listed or only have a very, very basic explanation.
2. I think you can solve those problems by working on collecting & posting more detailed information about topics you only have a brief description of or that there is currently no information about on the site.
1. Too much vandalism and unreliability of information.
2. Allow only registered members to edit/create pages. Make sure those registered members are confirmed through CAPTCHA, email, etc. And have more experienced moderators assigned to different categories to check page edits.
1. in my point of view all the answers given by the Wikipedia is perfect. but the arrangement of all answers is not attractive.
2. for avoid this problem please make some attraction back round and tabulation usage also must. thank you.
1. non expert opinion of explanation about subjects which looks like an expert explanation.
2. just do a simple test before letting people to post articals
1. I believe there is some inconsistency in the correct knowledge about topics.
2. This could be changed by having more experts on topics reviewing the information before it is posted.
1. There is absolutely nothing wrong with Wikipedia! Please donot try to "fix" something that is not broken!!!
2. Wikipedia is open to have their definitions being changed and there have been charges that some of the definitions have been hacked and manipulated by people that want to have their version of an event validated on Wikipedia.
1. The solution might be to have a review panel to look over disputed items or complaints to see if the definition is valid.
2. I think the biggest problem is that anybody can submit information, and there is no real way to verify if the information is even correct or not.
Wikipedia needs to start really investigating who is submitting information and makes sure that correct information isn't tampered with.
1. In many articles recent updations are not clear in wiki.Sometimes wrong informations are given or outdated informations.
2. Make a team for checking the article ,they can create updations if needed.
1. Not peer reviewed.
2. Have professionals review articles before posted.
1. Extreme left wing bias, as well as failure to monitor those who have extreme bias. The Climategate scientist who edited hundreds of articles in Wikipedia and wiped out all mention of the Medieval Warm Period and anything that included discussion of other causes of global warming (such as solar activity or continuation of human deforestation as agriculture advanced) were removed.
2. Allow those who report slander and abuse to have the editor's changes removed. Allow those who have credentials in their field to have a higher value in their edits than general off the street users.
1. Funding
2. Offer a premium upgrade with fuller content, additional resources (eb.com, hoovers.com, amazon.com, bankrate.com, *.edu, *.gov, *.org), integrated video with real-time RSS and twitter feeds. Set the price at something low to entice those who want the upgrade as easy as saying "yes". I recommend no more than $1.99/month * 1,000,000 users the first month = $1,990,000. This would alleviate Jimmy from having to beg 3 times a year for help and would immensely improve the quality of the information. mechturk@ymail.com
1. if we try to search anything in wikipedia means its taking much longer time to load the page than othersites.
2. you can increase the bandwidth of the site,thus making it a fast one
1. People write things that aren't correct or accurate on Wikipedia.
2. To solve the problem, Wikipedia can hire professionals to verify all information posted on Wikipedia.
1. Unverified informatioin.
2. Require the production of the reference to support the information's accuracy.
1. There is no standard level education or research ability to those who edit it.
2. Allow only those who can provide necessary abilities and pass tests and reviews by wikipedia standards.
1. The problem is we need seperate search Engine for all fields.
2. plz create an search Engine about all the fields.
1: GIVING THE UNWANTED MORE INFORMATION TRY TO REDUCE THE INFORMATION
2: SHORT THE STORIES INTO THE IMPORTANT LINES ONLY WHICH CAN HELPS US TO SEE THE MAIN POINTS
1A: In terms of search pages, if doesn`t find any match it is not even bringing any related topics to its users.
2A: In cases of not finding any match for search result, it can atleast mention linked search result thru someother search websites.
1. The biggest problem with Wikipedia is also its greatest strength - its inclusivity in that anyone can amend add information. A lot of people think that, therefore, the information on the site may not necessarily be accurate, and may even be deliberately misleading. For example : dates of death given for people who are still alive.
2. All information should be centrally vetted for accurate content. This should be highly publicized.
1. The length of the content, the huge history sections and irrelevant information.
2. Cut back on the history and the unneeded text sections, paraphrase.
1. Wikipedia describes every concept in a detailed manner; sometimes it is so deep that is confusing to layman.
2. This problem could be solved by adding pictorial representation of the data and also by using simple words and sentences.
1. Not articles on every person subject
2. Not everyone will write articles. Let people suggest articles that should be added, then hire people to write articles on the suggested subjects.
1. Anyone can edit the information so the content is unreliable.
2. Have a screening procedure by which people have to sign up, state credentials and a method of verifying them and be given a password in order to change or add information.
1. Wikipedia lacks in depth articles. Only the basics are available in many cases.
2. Could you link it with Google search's database somehow to get the specific result ?
1. PAGE LOADING TAKING LOT OF TIME IN WIKIPEDIA when compared to Google.
2. Please make the site in such a way that page loads quickly
1. Incorrect information
2. Restrict editing to qualified professionals in that field
1. Wikilawyering is the most frustrating part of working on Wikipedia. A casual user like me is easily intimated when more experienced members invoke seemingly obscure Wikipedia policies.
2. Simplify and reduce the number of Wikipedia policy pages.
I could not find any problem on Wikipedia. Many times, i am read Wikipedia frequently.
OUTTAKES:
1. Global warming is the biggest problem of current Wikipedia.
2. It can be solve by growing more trees
1. There aren't pictures of enough marvel comics characters.
2. Put more pictures up.

Analysis

[Bruno and Franny to expand]

  • Must reach out to user base outside of Wikipedia's community
  • What demographic are we reaching out to? how will we reach that demographic?
  • Utilizing crowdsourcing techniques to highlight factual inaccuracies
  • Organization and filtering techniques will make it easier to match factual inaccuracies with editors (new or existing) willing and able to make corrections

Proposed Solution

[Amanda to expand]

Create an application plug in for the purposes of:

- highlighting incorrect information and creating an accessible database issues;
- reaching out to readers of Wikipedia and drawing them into the Wikipedia editor community.

We envision an application plug-in that sits as an icon on the user's browser toolbar. When the user comes across an article they believe to be incorrect, they can open the icon into a simple horizontal toolbar across the bottom of the page....[INSERT SPECS AND WRITTEN DESCRIPTION]

Implementation

1. Name application
2. Reach out to Mozilla community to build proposed FireFox application extension.
3. Work with Wikimedia/Bridgespan to incorporate landing page and application with Wikipedia.

Future Steps

  • Discuss promotional campaign to launch application and increase Wikipedia's user base (e.g. Donate edits to Wikipedia)
  • Filtering/sorting mechanisms for the landing page - perhaps link to a re-organized Community Portal page
  • Link landing page to a web initiative similar to Aardvark
  • Integration with banner and other promotional tools on Wikipedia pages
  • Strengthening relationship and partnering with secondary school systems (e.g. lesson plan proposal)

Discussion Questions