Microsoft Encarta Adopting Wikiesque Process 314
An anonymous reader writes "The MSN Encarta program manager announced that readers of Microsoft's encyclopedia articles can now edit articles in a Wikipedia-like fashion. Once submitted, edits are reviewed by Encarta staff members for accuracy, readability, and proofreading before being incorporated into the article." From the post: "To support this program, we've hired some new research editors. Their job will be to help you out with things like fact-checking, syntax, and editorial style. Every writer can use a good editor, and we see no reason that community contributors deserve any less." J adds: This won't be a big surprise, but "Your submissions to Encarta must be your own work" and "you grant Microsoft permission to use, copy, distribute, transmit, publicly display, publicly perform, reproduce, edit, modify, translate and reformat your Submission."
First that, then this?! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:First that, then this?! (Score:5, Interesting)
I remember Microsoft, a few years ago called Encyclopedia Britannica a "relic" for not having enough multimedia content. Now, this move by Microsoft makes Encarta look like a relic compared to Wikipedia.
Can you criticize Microsoft on MS Encarta? (Score:5, Interesting)
Fostering a community spirit might be somewhat harder, I think due to the fact that the community isn't really actively involved in editing each other's works and contributing. It still goes through a review process, and the reviewers have the final say.
Wikipedia's strength (and some might say, weakness) is due to the large userbase that works on articles. Hence there is a broad spectrum of opinions and views when in the end sort of balances out. Would there be some sort of inherent bias due to the review process? I mean, does there have be any set of "officially sanctioned" view? Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] has an article on Wikipedia criticisms [wikipedia.org]. Can we expect to see an article that criticizes Microsoft or MS Encarta ON MS Encarta? That would be interesting.
Re:Can you criticize Microsoft on MS Encarta? (Score:5, Insightful)
A community page that cant criticize itself and its creator(s), really dont have anything to do with being a community.
This is just Microsoft wanting free articles.
Forget 'criticism', let's (Score:5, Interesting)
No results were found for your search in Encarta.
versuse n.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encarta>
ahref=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encarta [slashdot.org]http://
Forget being noncritical of Microsoft; let's ignore the competition, too! They don't even have anything on Linux save a mention in Open Source Software [msn.com].
search Encarta for "more evil than Satan" (Score:3, Interesting)
Encarta [msn.com]
hee hee!
Re:Forget 'criticism', let's (Score:3, Interesting)
Why on earth would anyone give MS free content when they could just post it on...wikipedia?
Re:Can you criticize Microsoft on MS Encarta? (Score:3, Insightful)
reject, refuse, deny
All I can say is.. (Score:5, Funny)
now wheres that patent application?
Re:All I can say is.. (Score:2)
Re:All I can say is.. (Score:2)
Douglas Adams works for Microsoft?
Who owns the content? (Score:3, Interesting)
So does this information belong to MS, or everyone?
Encarta can't be as "fresh" as Wikipedia (Score:5, Interesting)
It had to be... (Score:5, Funny)
2. Patent it under some dumb name.
3. ???
4. Profit! In Soviet Microsoft, software patents edit YOU!!!
Seriously, though, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, etc...
Re:It had to be... Apologies to Horst (Score:2, Insightful)
It turns out that the great advantage of the Wikipedia, the wiki format, which allows everybody to add/edit everything, is also its greatest disadvantage. There are a few topics that I care about, a few of which I actually contributed to the German version of Wikipedia. Watching these entries change over t
Me Too! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Me Too! (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, since it's Microsoft, the company a considerable number of people love to hate, you could also see the anti-Micro$oft crowd trying to DOS their poor encyclopaedia staff with bogus submissions, but I hope folks aren't THAT hard-up for something to do.
Re:Me Too! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Me Too! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Me Too! (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd rather vote by withholding dollars or support, freely criticizing where and when it seems appropriate, and backing legal action if and when they cross legal red lines. Sue 'em if they attempt to leverage their monopoly by blocking competing efforts in their web browser or if they violate I
Re:Me Too! (Score:3, Interesting)
I dunno, I've got lots of spare time :)
My devious mind starts wondering.... Take a random Wikipedia article, use the Google language tools to translate it to some other language and then back to English. Submit it to MS Encarta under the name of another randomly chosen Wikipedia article. The only problem I envision is that MS will probably require a complex login and verification process instead of allowing anonymous contributions. That'd make scripting more difficult. I could do it manually a few times
Re:Me Too! (Score:4, Insightful)
That's a great attitude. Thanks for the vote of confidence.
"It will be impossible for Microsoft's small (in comparison) payed staff to sift through hundreds, even thousands of changes, even if they use an automated filter to reduce the number of poor submissions."
Impossible?
So you've tried it?
We couldn't possibly know the chances of success without having more information. I work for the company, and *I* don't even have any idea how many people we've hired to handle this.
There are also assumptions being made here about the volume of changes. It could be that the type of person who is an Encarta customer isn't the type of person who likes to submit corrections/additions, and that the overall traffic might be very *low*.
I say give it a chance. At worst, it will quietly fail, and nobody gets hurt.
At best, Encarta becomes a community effort.
Sounds like it's worth the risk to me.
"this just seems like Microsoft saying, hey look 'me too!'"
It's actually very difficult to find *anything* in the tech world that doesn't somehow fall under the category of "me too!"
Frankly, I'm glad that Microsoft is more concerned with getting a quality product out than with its image as an innovator.
The fact is, people seem to like Wikipedia, and we're giving it a shot ourselves, not because of the "Hey - we need to be like Wikipedia" factor, but because it seems like a good idea.
Not only that, but I actually rather like the idea here (and this post is the first I've heard of it). Adding a panel to review submissions for accuracy seems like a good move. If it works, then I think it will greatly enhance the value of the product.
But, then, I'm biased. I *do* own stock in the company
Re:Me Too! (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh man, that should have garnered you enough -1 Trolls to be modded out of my threshold. When has MS EVER been concerned with getting a quality product out???
This is definitely a response to Encarta becoming obsolete in the face of Wikipedia and in typical MS style they don't really get why the competition is better and are implementing the wrong part.
Re:Me Too! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Me Too! (Score:2)
Indeed, Wikipedia's strengths, which compel me to involve myself, are a matter of a complex culture existing which permits an exchange of information and the development of a collaborative knowledge base, and the culture surrounding that knowledge base is a culture which is absolutely fundamentally dependent on the presence of every element of the Wikipedia design, including discussion pages for exchange of information and peer review, on page histories, and on the very sense of the project being a communit
To follow ... (Score:3, Insightful)
positiv: So MS values the "Wikiesque Process"
neutral: An interesting develpment
negative: Who will own the copyright? Surely M$!
CC.
Re:To follow ... (Score:2, Funny)
/. jokes (Score:5, Funny)
Re:/. jokes (Score:2, Funny)
Re:/. jokes (Score:2)
And what is "checking for proofreading" anyway?? Does this mean Encarta editors are merely going to ask you if you proofread your submission?
Pattern? (Score:5, Interesting)
Longhorn to use UNIX-like User Permissions [slashdot.org]
"Readers of Microsoft's encyclopedia articles can now edit articles in a Wikipedia-like fashion"
huh...
Re:Pattern? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Pattern? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pattern? (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft's inital position on Linux has been harsh, but do remember, Linux is 1)direct competition to Windows and 2)has a radically differnt philosophy that basically attacks the core of Microsoft's business model. How would anyone here feel if someone sprang up in direct competion to the way you live your life? How do any of us react to luddites and technophobes? Very similarly in spirit to MS's initial reaction to Linux.
But the shock is starting to where off and Microsoft is realizing that Linux isn't going away. So their learning and changing.
The changes in Encarta aren't just about embracing wiki. Microsoft's corporate buzzwords, the backbone of the feature set promoted in Office 2003 are integration and colaboration. Microsoft is simply extending that.
Re:Pattern? (Score:4, Informative)
1) Whlie MS is a corporation, it is made up of people, and its direction and attitude are controlled by a handfull of people, the same ones who have been there all along. So when you're looking at how the company responds, the company's response is a reflection of how those at the top feel.
2) People don't always go through these stages in the same order. I'd say we've seen a lot of denial, but have yet to see the anger. We'll see that (even combined with bargaining) when they realize there's no way to stop FOSS and start filing all the lawsuits they can.
3) I'd say it's more of a distant threat to Windows. They're feeling it now, but if you look at the numbers, Windows systems still blow away Linux in numbers. It's not really competition for them yet.
But this brings on a bigger point. MS has been the big guy has always dealt with competition in only a few ways: 1) buy them out, 2) give away product until they go bankrupt, 3) change standards so the competition won't work. They have yet to EVER go head to head against any company on a level playing field, where MS has to compete with them on NOTHING more than the quality of the product -- at least in the long run. They may start that way, but once they realize they aren't winning, they tip the tables in their favor by whatever tricks they can, and NOT by improving their product.
Linux is different for many reasons. It's not about profit. It's not a company that can be bought or driven out of business. It's not one unified source (no pun intended) that can be quickly snuffed. It's like fighting a swarm of bees, instead of facing a cobra. You kill the cobra, and it's gone. You kill one bee, there's a hundred more to sting you again.
While MS is beginning to face the reality that Linux is here, and likely won't go away, a lot of what's going on has to do with the fact that the Linux (in specific and FOSS in general) development and deployment model is so alien to them they still don't get what's going on. They're trying to, and they're realizing if they don't adapt, they'll destroy themselves, and they're trying to understand the competition, but all they can see is the letter of the process, not the spirit.
Re:Pattern? (Score:4, Informative)
"Whlie MS is a corporation, it is made up of people, and its direction and attitude are controlled by a handfull of people, the same ones who have been there all along. So when you're looking at how the company responds, the company's response is a reflection of how those at the top feel."
While it might appear that way from the outside, it's really very different from within the b0rg cube.
Although strategy, as in many large companies, is typically handed down from the top, the highest rewards go to the employees who change something about Microsoft - whether that change is financial, cultural, or whatever.
In a sense, this is top management asking *everybody* in the company to contribute to strategy.
The problem is that, with 55,000 of us, it can sometimes be tough to be heard. But, the opportunity is there for anybody who wants to step up and suggest a new way of doing things.
This new Encarta strategy, for example, almost certainly came from someone low down in the hierarchy. The higher-ups are too busy making the decisions that suits make (which is exactly what they should be doing). Someone on the Encarta team probably took a look at Wikipedia and figured out a way to integrate aspects of the system into Encarta to improve Encarta's value. That's not a top-down decision.
"...once they realize they aren't winning, they tip the tables in their favor by whatever tricks they can, and NOT by improving their product."
First of all, you'd be hard pressed to find someone in the company who feels that we aren't "winning." Most MS employees are so consumed with doing their jobs well that they could care less about whether or not a product is succeeding against a competitor - that, fortunately, is a concern for the higher-ups. The people building this stuff absolutely *do* work on improving products. There are exceptions (IE, although we're working on this), but for the most part, in order to make products better and encourage future adoption, we *have* to improve products, and most employees relish the process.
The fact is, your average softie could double or triple his/her salary by going to a competitor like IBM - Microsoft doesn't pay that well in spite of the money in the bank. Most people are at Microsoft because they *want* to be there and because they believe in the company, which actually makes them more akin to OSS developers than, say, developers working for another company.
It's just that we happen to like MS software, and OSS devs happen to like OSS software.
In short, we're all working to change the company from the *bottom* up. Not all direction comes from the top.
"Linux is different for many reasons. It's not about profit."
Linux, like Microsoft, isn't that simple.
There are people who are definitely in it for the dough. Believe me - I live in Portland (my cousin lives a few houses down from Linus, actually), and I encounter my fair share of OSS consultants out here, and I can assure you that my car looks rather shabby next to some of the nice pieces of machinery these people are driving.
I also have friends who could care less about the dough, and for whom the whole reward is understanding something more about the kernel.
Also, where profit is concerned, I think you might find some opposition to your point of view coming from companies like IBM which have simultaneously contributed to, and fed off of OSS.
None of the this stuff is black and white - Linux, MS, IBM, whatever - *none* of it.
Re:Pattern? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pattern? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pattern? (Score:2)
I submit articles to wikipedia because I know I'm not making someone else rich, and the information there remains pretty much unbiased. I'd love to read Linux articles and articles on GPL, software patents etc, on Encarta. If I submit 'Linux is more stable', will it get approved?
So heres another company that says we'll look cool to opensource people, let them work on our projects and we'll sell the stuff. Sun has b
Re:Pattern? (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, my mistake. I thought you were addressing me as Buster and suggesting that Microsoft was writing Open Source Child Porn.
I mean, really, is Microsoft above alleging a connection between Child Porn and Open Source Software?
I'm sure Dr. Oxford himself would concur regarding such a connection [pointlesswasteoftime.com], after all.
Is it just me... (Score:2, Insightful)
Goatse.cx? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Goatse.cx? (Score:5, Insightful)
Second: I must say that Wiki serves me pretty well especially with some cryptic webtrends/names wich I sometimes don't get the first time. It's a great source if you want to know more about things you wouldn't find in any other encyclopedia. This is where Encarta will come in second place I guess.
Yes, but (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know how I can trust it otherwise.
Ummm.... (Score:5, Interesting)
What's next, and "community" site to allow programmers to write new applications for Microsoft to sell?
Re:Ummm.... (Score:2)
Re:Ummm.... (Score:2, Insightful)
In any case Wikipedia is licensed under GNU Free Document License, not GPL, though I hear they are similar. I have not read the wik
BECAUSE.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Someone says the Earth is round , someone else say it is flat. They can argue about it till the cows come home , but the only way to put the matter to rest is to compromise and say it is square. So then of course Wikipedia will wind up with the asinine statement that the Earth is square. So then the reader comes along and reads the article and thinks he made a step forward when he actually made a step backwards to his quest for knowledge.
It does not matter that Wikipedia has half a million articles if the bulk of them are loaded with the nutty opinions and hearsay of mouth-foaming raving lunatics pounding away at their keyboards day and night in their personal Jihad to get their version of the world published on Wikipedia.
Just try to edit any controversial topic on Wikipedia and see what happens within 15 minutes.
It is scary when you think about it , we are now spreading so much misinformation through the internet through sites like Wikipedia that appear on the surface as legitimate sources but which in reality are mostly conduits of partisan propaganda.
There used to be a time when Knowledge was the result of real research and facts. Wikipedia and other similar sites have turned knowledge into a duel of dissenting opinions.
Truth will never be what the editors of Wikipedia and other such sites say it is, Truth is what is regardless of what we would want the world to believe.
Wikipedia should do the world a favor and at the very least cut the academic pretense and announce that it is only a collection of opinions on any given topic.
Re:BECAUSE.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Compared to the non-existence of controversial topics in any other encyclopaedia. I think I'll take the one that actually exists.
Re:BECAUSE.. (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, if truth is a mysterious absolute and everybody's opinion is just some schmoe's biased opinion, why the fuck are these other sources better windows on the truth than Wikipedia? You seem to propose, in a typically ignorant illiberal fashion (not conservative, but illiberal), that the existance of dissenting opinions itself *IS* the problem, and that by presenting a nice, tidy, consistent, biased opinion that neglects the alternative point of view, you somehow get closer to the truth.
In fact, I have very rarely seen an article on Wikipedia that follows the pattern you suggest, where two sides compromise by writing a complete factual falsehood. Your straw-man simply doesn't exist. Get over it. The entire reason for the NPOV schtick is to get people to present both sides without blatantly saying one opinion is right and the other is wrong, and getting the writers to distinguish between the facts and the interpretations/opinions.
Re:Ummm.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ummm.... (Score:3, Informative)
Early Wikipedia contributors worried about this. (Score:2)
Re:Ummm.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, I dunno about that. I just recently dug around for sites that listed the assorted physical and orbital numbers for a lot of bodies in the solar system. I found that Wikipedia was among the best-organized and most-complete sites. And the pages are quite consistent in their layout, making for rapid location of the data.
Actually, much of the scientific
Bud Light Presents Real Men of Genius (Score:5, Funny)
(Real Men of Genius)
Today we salute you Mr. Aaron Patterson
(Mr. Aaron Patterson)
Where would this world be without you and your innovations like typing www.en.wikkipedia.org into your address bar and copying virtually every feature off of it.
(Mr Copycat)
Thanks you for giving us the brilliant new features of user contributions and a clean fresh design just like www.en.wikkipedia.org.
(Who do you think you're fooling?)
Few men are brave enough to steal an idea and call it their own, but you have no problem posting about it on your blog.
(Look at ME!)
So crack open an ice cold Bud Light Mr Aaron Patterson You have high standands when it come to the online encyclopedia industry, and intelectual property
(Mr. Aaron Patterson)
Re:Bud Light Presents Real Men of Genius (Score:5, Interesting)
Something that wiki and slashdot both lack.
Re:Bud Light Presents Real Men of Genius (Score:2, Insightful)
Editor review before accepting modification (Score:5, Interesting)
The following entries would be interesting then... (Score:5, Funny)
2) Linux
3) SCO
4) Longhorn
5) U.S. Department of Justice
This confirms it (Score:5, Funny)
The end is the beginning, the end of days, dogs and cats living together. Tux and Clippy playing ring around the posie (sp?)
Obvious what they want... (Score:4, Insightful)
Encarta:
Separate articles on Cache, DNS and Poison none useful.
Wikipedia:
None found, Suggests searching Wikipedia with Google or Yahoo, Google suggests this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoofing_attacks [wikipedia.org]
Which has a link to this one:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS_cache_poisoning [wikipedia.org]
Shows you how fresh Wikipedia is, it looks like the DNS Cache poisioning page is too new to be indexed by either Google or Yahoo.
More to the point I can see why Microsoft wants to go the same way.
Re:Obvious what they want... (Score:2, Informative)
But I see what you're saying about Wikipedia being "fresh". I like seeing my vandalism show up righ
Re:Obvious what they want... (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the things I dislike about google is that they haven't improved this in the last 8 years (when did they start the beta?) and while it's a minor annoyance whe
open source vs. proprietary (Score:3, Insightful)
Proprietary: same as open source, except you pay some company for the privilege, again and again
next thing you know... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:next thing you know... (Score:2)
Errr ... business as usual? (Score:5, Interesting)
And now Encarta will have that. Which is a GOOD thing. If you want to create an encyclopedia, you go with Wikipedia (or H2G2, or Everything2). If you want to help improve Encarta, because you use it a lot, NOW YOU CAN. It's just a feature, people.
Patent {click} (Score:2)
a) Microsoft found on the Internet
b) Microsoft starting using
c) Microsoft patents the idea (see 'Patent' in MSN)
d) Microsoft sues the pants of everybody using it.
fact-checking? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:fact-checking? (Score:4, Interesting)
Easy to catch them out then - just create a Wiki article about something that doesn't exist anywhere. Like Yellow Pages does - puts fake companies in, and catch people using the Yellow Pages (against it's terms) to find companies for business. Or map companies adding a very short fake road somewhere.
Ken (Score:3, Insightful)
And the new features are... (Score:2, Funny)
(1) The "Encarta Answers" service for getting instant answers to your questions will be available in four new languages. Repeat "FOUR" new languages. Boy, was that tough!
(2) Whole site gets a new makeover, with a simpler, cleaner design. It makes all of our pages load a bit faster, too. Yep, we figure somehow clean sites are not only cleaner, they are a lot clear too. And that makes more space for all those ads too.
(4) L
Luckily, (Score:2)
I wonder if.. (Score:2, Interesting)
How? (Score:3, Interesting)
Wikipedia works so well because of the volume of information that is changed, and that is changed in real time. Microsoft would need a HUGE team, or have to outsource, and although an outsourced encyclopedia would prove comedic, it wouldn't be useful.
Increase quality and compete... (Score:5, Interesting)
A moderation system, including a way to submit changes to articles. Basically, there would be a way for readers to "vote" for various metrics on articles, including accuracy, readability, etc. Also, the system would keep track of articles that are accessed more often. The moderation system would work like this: The more often an article is accessed, the more important it is assumed to be, and therefore, changes would need to get higher moderation points before becoming an officially accepted part of the article. Up to that point, there would be a list of pending changes at the bottom of articles, which readers could see. This is akin to the development/stable process used in software development, and it would perhaps increase the quality of articles.
Further, Wikipedia should figure out all kinds of business ventures to bring in money for further quality improvement. A Wikipedia magazine, containing random articles picked by a small staff; a dead-tree Wikipedia set, CDs and DVDs, and other junk that could be sold might bring in money to pay a staff of researchers to go through the entire encyclopedia and increase the detail level and quality of its contents.
Also, a method for adding pictures, videos, and other content to articles should be provided, so people can contribute original art, photographs, music, etc., or like items that are free/public domain. This would add value to the encyclopedia as a whole.
Re:Increase quality and compete... (Score:5, Informative)
1. Moderation is tricky like hell. Slashdot has one of the best moderating systems out there, and you see how many mods-on-crack you still see. It might still work out, and it might be a good idea to try it out. Atleast part of the appeal of Wikipedia (atleast for me) is that I can go into the present article on, say, QBASIC, delete every single word that's been written on the subject, and start over. Of course, if my new version sucks, somebody will revert it back to their version. If its better, it stays. That kind of flexibility comes at a cost, and it's something we at Wikipedia patrol vigorously. But I think that is extremely cool. There have been attempts [bbc.co.uk] made [everything2.org] to create a moderated encyclopedia. I think that would just take the fun out of Wikipedia very quickly.
2. Business has always been a tricky issue at Wikipedia - pretty famously, the Spanish Wikipedia forked into the Encyclopedia Libre [enciclopedia.us.es] because of worries that advertising might go up on Wikipedia. Even now, a lot of people are worried about whether advertising would affect the way we work. Right now, the status quo seems to be raising money for equipment from donation drives and merchandising [cafepress.com].
3. It's been done [wikimedia.org].
Re:Increase quality and compete... (Score:3, Insightful)
Explain Linux and FOSS? (Score:2)
And keep track of changes of these articles
So let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
Boatloads of money needed... (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, Amazon-style "people who read this article also read..." links should guide people through the Wikipedia.
Google-style text links could be placed on the side of some articles.
The revenue from all of these activities could finance a staff of full-time researchers, photographers, developers, and so on, who could improve the quality and detail level of the reference as a whole. I know people here hate commercials, but they're small, text-only, and will help this free resource to grow into something that can rival the likes of the old-style Encyclopedia Britannica. I can see room for so much here; it will just take boatloads of money to make it work really well.
Re:Boatloads of money needed... (Score:2)
Doubtful that either amazon or google ads will appear though.
Re:Boatloads of money needed... (Score:2)
Re:Boatloads of money needed... (Score:2)
Let's talk about the license (Score:3, Interesting)
BBC's H2G2 was also a non-free project and a lot of people were willing to contribute to that.
It will be interesting to see if Encarta can actually defend their policy of "letting someone else to do part of the work". Of course, there are much more ways to pay back the best contributors:
* Write 20 articles and your name will be in the Microsoft Blog about Encarta
* Write 200 articles and you might be considered to be hired by their fact-checking department
* Write 2000 articles
The point is that there is so much more reward in a destructive behavior from some points of view.
* Who will be the first to smuggle in wrong information into an article that gets published by encarta
* Who will be able to turn an article into a Microsoft-bashing pamphlet
* Who will be the first to initiate a scandal about cencorship and so on...
In the end, it's a nice idea which does not meet the current standards of wikipedia.
Re:Let's talk about the license (Score:3, Insightful)
*sigh*
If Wikipedia got exclusive rights to the material for all my hard work of writing and correcting the articles, I wouldn't contribute to them in the first place.
I don't want to work for just one company without getting paid. It's a whole different thing with Wikipedia,
Great :-( (Score:2)
Interesting... (Score:2)
The Slashdot Slant Maching Keeps Rolling (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Slashdot Slant Maching Keeps Rolling (Score:2)
Very similar indeed: there's only one step different between them:
Wikipedia
Microsoft:
I guess it's up to the individual, potential contributors to decide wheth
Welcome to Nupedia... (Score:3, Informative)
yay! (Score:2, Interesting)
Welcome to Prodigy! (Score:2)
All the clubs were on bland, family-friendly, consumer-oriented topics. Nothing controversial or political or off-color.
And they hired people, who for want of a better word I'll call "censors," whose job was to patrol the clubs and remove off-topic notices.
Of co
Sure, but M$ missed something (Score:2, Insightful)
But one could still withold the rights for them to "sell" works without permission.
In response to Google's latest developments? (Score:2, Interesting)
The co-opting of the Wiki (Score:3, Insightful)
But people who give of their time to Microsoft are performing charity for billionaires. Clever devils, Redmond: they understand one of the core appeals of the Wiki and open source movements is community, a value so debased in our right wing society that its resurrection in these projects is something of a bright hope.
There are two problems with the Encarta scheme. One, Microsoft is exploiting unpaid work for its own gain. And two, more critically, Microsoft's notorious censorship (cf. the pruning of disagreeable words from its Office dictionaries), dishonesty in public policy (cf. attempts to control open source) and irresponsibly-used economic might (cf. antitrust behavior in the US and EU) cast a long shadow over its ability to objectively shepherd any body of knowledge.
Moral: don't do free work for bullies.
Errr ... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I just hope Microsoft don't patent this. (Score:2)
sure
that MS
would
make
their
patent
all fruity
and
call it
a kiwi,
with sufficient
sophistry
to stand erect
in court.
Re:What if you write something critical of Microso (Score:2, Insightful)
I think an encyclopaedia should stick to factual information, and not philosophical or political rants.
I sure hope they wouldn't put any of the type of drivel slashbots spew into Encarta.
There's too much of it in Wikipedia, which is good, because it guarantee's that anyone with a brain reading it will never, ever, forget that it's an amateur hack-job.
Never will (or should) you be able to cite Wikipedia in, say, your Master's thesis, and expect to pass.
Re:better than wikipedia (Score:2, Interesting)