Wikipedia

Part of the TechTarget Network of Enterprise IT Web Sites
Home Look It Up ITKnowledge Exchange Fast References Products White Papers Blogs

Search our IT-specific encyclopedia for:
 
OR Jump to a topic:
 
Advanced Search
Browse alphabetically:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #
All Categories Internet Applications

Wikipedia

Wikipedia is a free, open content online encyclopedia created through the collaborative effort of a community of users known as Wikipedians . Anyone registered on the site can create an article for publication; registration is not required to edit articles. The site's name comes from wiki , a server program that enables anyone to edit Web site content through their Web browser.

Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger co-founded Wikipedia as an offshoot of an earlier encyclopedia project, Nupedia, in January 2001. Originally, Wikipedia was created to provide content for Nupedia. However, as the wiki site became established it soon grew beyond the scope of the earlier project. As of January 2008, the encyclopedia offered over four million articles, 2,175,080 of which were in English. At that same time, Alexa ranked Wikipedia as the eighth-most popular site on the Internet. Wikipedia was the only non-commercial site of the top ten.

Criticisms of Wikipedia include assertions that its openness makes it unreliable and unauthorative. Because articles don't include bylines, authors aren't publicly accountable for what they write. Similarly, because anyone can edit any article, the site's entries are vulnerable to unscrupulous edits. In August 2007, Virgil Griffiths created a site, WikiScanner , where users could track the sources of edits to Wikipedia entries. Griffiths reported that self-serving edits typically involved whitewashing or removal of criticism of a person or organization or, conversely, insertion of negative comments into the entry about a competitor. Wikipedia depends upon the vigilance of editors to find and reverse such changes to content.

In addition to the encyclopedia, the non-profit Wikipedia foundation oversees several other open-content projects, including:

  • Wiktionary, a dictionary and thesaurus
  • Wikibooks, a collection of free texts and other books
  • Wikiquote, a collection of quotations
  • Wikisource, a collection of free source documents
  • Wikiversity, a collection of free learning materials
  • Wikispecies, a directory of species
  • Meta-Wiki, which coordinates all the other projects.




Read more about it at:
> There's also a page of criticism of Wikipedia and related discussion on the site.
> Wikipedia Watch is a site dedicated to keeping an eye on Wikipedia.
> Wikipedia provides a more extensive entry about its organization, history and philosophy.
Last updated on: Jan 14, 2008

Are you a Know-IT-All?
What do you call the nucleus of a computer operating system?
Answer


WORD OF THE DAY...
iTunes U
LEARN MORE ABOUT...
Web 2.0 applications for the enterprise
Most popular and handy
Every TechTarget website
WhatIs.com RSS Feeds
Home Look It Up ITKnowledge Exchange Fast References Products White Papers Blogs
About Us   |   Contact Us   |   For Advertisers   |   For Business Partners   |   Reprints   |   RSS   |   Awards
TechTarget provides enterprise IT professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective IT purchase decisions and managing their organizations' IT projects - with its network of technology-specific Web sites, events and magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Reprints  |  Site Map




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2008, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts