首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Looking back, it was naive to expect Wikipedia’s joyride to last forever. Since its inception in 2001, the user-written online e
Looking back, it was naive to expect Wikipedia’s joyride to last forever. Since its inception in 2001, the user-written online e
admin
2012-02-24
36
问题
Looking back, it was naive to expect Wikipedia’s joyride to last forever. Since its inception in 2001, the user-written online encyclopedia has expanded just as everything else online has: exponentially. Up until about two years ago, Wikipedians were adding, on average, some 2,200 new articles to the project every day. The English version hit the 2 million—article mark in September 2007 and then the 3 million mark in August 2009—surpassing the 600-year-old Chinese Yongle Encyclopedia as the largest collection of general knowledge ever compiled (well, at least according to Wikipedia’s entry on itself).
But early in 2007, something strange happened: Wikipedia’s growth line flattened. People suddenly became reluctant to create new articles or fix errors or add their kernels of wisdom to existing pages. "When we first noticed it, we thought it was a blip," says Ed Chi, a computer scientist at California’s Palo Alto Research Center whose lab has studied Wikipedia extensively. But Wikipedia peaked in March 2007 at about 820,000 contributors; the site hasn’t seen as many editors before. "By the middle of 2009, we have realized that this was a real phenomenon," says Chi. "It’s no longer growing exponentially. Something very different is happening now."
What stunted Wikipedia’s growth? And what does the slump tell us about the long- term viability of such strange and invaluable online experiments? Perhaps the Web has limits after all, particularly when it comes to the phenomenon known as crowd sourcing. Wikipedians—the volunteers who run the site, especially the approximately 1,000 editors who wield the most power over what you see—have been in a self-reflective mood. Not only is Wikipedia slowing, but also new stats suggest that hard-core participants are a pretty homogeneous set—the opposite of the ecumenical wiki ideal. Women, for instance, make up only 13% of contributors. The project’s annual conference in Buenos Aires this summer bustled with discussions about the numbers and how the movement can attract a wider class of participants.
At the same time, volunteers have been trying to improve Wikipedia’s trustworthiness, which has been sullied by a few defamatory hoaxes—most notably, one involving the journalist John Seigenthaler, whose Wikipedia entry falsely stated that he’d been a suspect in the John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy assassinations. They recently instituted a major change, imposing a layer of editorial control on entries about living people. In the past, only articles on high-profile subjects like Barack Obama were protected from anonymous revisions. Under the new plan, people can freely alter Wikipedia articles on, say, their local officials or company heads—but those changes will become live only once they’ve been vetted by a Wikipedia administrator. "Few articles on Wikipedia are more important than those that are about people who are actually walking the earth," says Jay Walsh, a spokesman for the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit that oversees the encyclopedia. "What we want to do is to find ways to be more fair, accurate, and to do better—to be nicer—to those people."
Yet that gets to Wikipedia’s central dilemma. Chi’s research suggests that the encyclopedia thrives on chaos—that the more freewheeling it is, the better it can attract committed volunteers who keep adding to its corpus. But over the years, as Wikipedia has added layers of control to bolster accuracy and fairness, it has developed a kind of bureaucracy. "It may be that the bureaucracy is inevitable when a project like this becomes sufficiently important," Chi says. But who wants to participate in a project lousy with bureaucrats?
There is a benign explanation for Wikipedia’s slackening pace: the site has simply hit the natural limit of knowledge expansion. In its early days, it was easy to add stuff. But once others had entered historical sketches of every American city, taxonomies of all the world’s species, bios of every character on The Sopranos and essentially everything else—well, what more could they expect you to add? So the only stuff left is esoteric, and it attracts fewer participants because the only editing jobs left are "janitorial"— making sure that articles are well formatted and readable.
Chi thinks something more drastic has occurred: the Web’s first major ecosystem collapses. Think of Wikipedia’s community of volunteer editors as a family of bunnies left to roam freely over an abundant green prairie. In early, fat times, their numbers grow geometrically. More bunnies consume more resources, though, and at some point, the prairie becomes depleted, and the population crashes.
Instead of prairie grasses, Wikipedia’s natural resource is an emotion. "There’s the rush of joy that you get the first time you make an edit to Wikipedia, and you realize that 330 million people are seeing it live," says Sue Gardner, Wikimedia Foundation’s executive director. In Wikipedia’s early days, every new addition to the site had a roughly equal chance of surviving editors’ scrutiny. Over time, though, a class system emerged; now revisions made by infrequent contributors are much likelier to be undone by 61ite Wikipedians. Chi also notes the rise of wiki-lawyering: for your editors to stick, you’ve got to learn to cite the complex laws of Wikipedia in arguments with other editors. Together, these changes have created a community not very hospitable to newcomers. Chi says, "People begin to wonder, ’Why should I contribute anymore?’"— and suddenly, like rabbits out of food, Wikipedia’s population stops growing.
The foundation has been working to address some of these issues; for example, it is improving the site’s antiquated, often incomprehensible editing interface. But as for the larger issue of trying to attract a more diverse constituency, it has no specific plan—only a goal. "The average Wikipedian is a young man in a wealthy country who’s probably a graduate student—somebody who’s smart, literate, engaged in the world of ideas, thinking, learning, writing all the time," Gardner says. Those people are invaluable, she notes, but the encyclopedia is missing the voices of people in developing countries, women and experts in various specialties that have traditionally been divorced from tech. "We’re just starting to get our heads around this. It’s a genuinely difficult problem," Gardner says. "Obviously, Wikipedia is pretty good now. It works. But our challenge is to build a rich, diverse, broad culture of people, which is harder than it looks."
Before Wikipedia, nobody would have believed that an anonymous band of strangers could create something so useful. So is it crazy to imagine that, given the difficulties it faces, someday the whole experiment might blow up? "There are some bloggers out there who say, ’Oh, yeah, Wikipedia will be gone in five years,’" Chi says. "I think that’s sensational. But our data does suggest its existence in 10 or 15 years may be in question."
Ten years is a long time on the Internet—longer than Wikipedia has even existed. Michael Snow, the foundation’s chairman, says he’s got a "fair amount of confidence" that Wikipedia will go on. It remains a precious resource—a completely free journal available to anyone and the model for a mode of online collaboration once hailed as revolutionary. Still, Wikipedia’s troubles suggest the limits of Web 2.0—that when an idealized community gets too big, it starts becoming dysfunctional. Just like every other human organization.
What can be inferred from the passage?
选项
A、Wikipedia is an accurate and fair system.
B、Wikipedia is a victim of its own success.
C、Wikipedia faces severe competition from other websites.
D、Wikipedia is getting better under the new plan of control.
答案
B
解析
此题是推断题。Wikipedia现在所面临的问题正是由于其快速发展而导致的。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/XsiO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
AskanAmericanschoolchildwhatheorsheislearninginschoolthesedaysandyoumightevengetareply,providedyouaskit
Coffee,ahotbeveragefavoredbypeopleindifferentregions,issaidtohavebeen【1】______【1】______inEthiopia.Itwasfound
______isusuallyconsideredasthenationalsymbolofNewZealand.
ItissaidthatGeorgeWashingtonwasoneofthefirsttorealizehowimportantthebuildingofcanalswouldbetothenation’s
Thefutureofbusinessliesnotinsellingproductsbutinsellingdreamsandemotions,accordingtoRolfJensen,directorofth
我接触过不少老人,其中有的是我的好朋友,只要一见面,就会天南地北,无所不谈。从这些老人地谈话中,我感到他们常常为“闲得无聊”而发愁。这些老人的空闲时间特别多,同外边接触的机会又比较少,常常会被忙碌的晚辈忘记。不少年轻人,在家中可以同朋友和同事们兴致
Imagineachartthatbeginswhenmanfirstappearedontheplanetandtrackstheeconomicgrowthofsocietiesfromthenforward.
AuthorEmmaHeathcote-Jameshasspentnineyearslookingintoreal-lifeghoststories,collectingtalesfromhundredsofpeople
FictionandRealityTherelationshipbetweenfictionandreality1.Fiction:the【1】______reflectionofreality【1】______.Re
Speechacttheorywasfirstproposedby______.
随机试题
骨骼肌牵张反射使
可使接收频率增大,振动源或接收体的运动应
某妇女,30岁,第一胎孕38周,发现风湿性心脏病二尖瓣狭窄伴肺动脉高压5年,孕期心功能Ⅱ级,临产3小时,宫口扩张1.5cm,心率120次/分,呼吸30次/分,咳嗽频繁,肺底有罗音。
竖井的井壁应是耐火极限不低于()的非燃烧体。
背景某安装公司承包一演艺中心的空调工程,演艺中心地处江边(距离江边100m),空调工程设备材料:双工况冷水机组(650Rt)、蓄冰槽、江水源热泵机组、燃气锅炉、低噪声冷却塔(650t/h)、板式热交换机、水泵、空调箱、风机盘管、各类阀门(DN20
资产评估报告书是建立评估档案、归集评估档案资料的()。
在组合风险限额管理中确定资本分配的权重时,不需要考虑的因素是()。
根据票据法律制度的规定,票据持票人应在法定期限内向付款人提示付款。关于票据提示付款期限的下列表述中,正确的有( )。
虽然政府与企业、家庭一起共同参与国民经济,但其行为方式和目的_______。企业和居民是以收益最大化为前提和目标的。而政府的经济活动一方面不能_______收益和成本,另一方面又必须以全社会的公正和公平为前提。填入划横线部分最恰当的一项是:
"Congratulations,youarestillintherunningtowardsbecomeAmerica’sNextTopModel."【M1】______fivepointsforguessingth
最新回复
(
0
)