(Ebook PDF) Wikipedia 20 Stories of an Incomplete Revolution 1st Edition by Joseph Reagle, Jackie Koerner -Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery:9780262538176, 0262538172
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ISBN 10:0262538172
ISBN 13:9780262538176
Author: Joseph Reagle, Jackie Koerner
Wikipedia’s first twenty years: how what began as an experiment in collaboration became the world’s most popular reference work.
We have been looking things up in Wikipedia for twenty years. What began almost by accident—a wiki attached to an nascent online encyclopedia—has become the world’s most popular reference work. Regarded at first as the scholarly equivalent of a Big Mac, Wikipedia is now known for its reliable sourcing and as a bastion of (mostly) reasoned interaction. How has Wikipedia, built on a model of radical collaboration, remained true to its original mission of “free access to the sum of all human knowledge” when other tech phenomena have devolved into advertising platforms? In this book, scholars, activists, and volunteers reflect on Wikipedia’s first twenty years, revealing connections across disciplines and borders, languages and data, the professional and personal.
The contributors consider Wikipedia’s history, the richness of the connections that underpin it, and its founding vision. Their essays look at, among other things, the shift from bewilderment to respect in press coverage of Wikipedia; Wikipedia as “the most important laboratory for social scientific and computing research in history”; and the acknowledgment that “free access” includes not just access to the material but freedom to contribute—that the summation of all human knowledge is biased by who documents it.
Contributors
Phoebe Ayers, Omer Benjakob, Yochai Benkler, William Beutler, Siko Bouterse, Rebecca Thorndike-Breeze, Amy Carleton, Robert Cummings, LiAnna L. Davis, Siân Evans, Heather Ford, Stephen Harrison, Heather Hart, Benjamin Mako Hill, Dariusz Jemielniak, Brian Keegan, Jackie Koerner, Alexandria Lockett, Jacqueline Mabey, Katherine Maher, Michael Mandiberg, Stephane Coillet-Matillon, Cecelia A. Musselman, Eliza Myrie, Jake Orlowitz, Ian A. Ramjohn, Joseph Reagle, Anasuya Sengupta, Aaron Shaw, Melissa Tamani, Jina Valentine, Matthew Vetter, Adele Vrana, Denny Vrandečić
Table of Contents:
I: Hindsight
- The Many (Reported) Deaths of Wikipedia
- From Anarchy to Wikiality, Glaring Bias to Good Cop: Press Coverage of Wikipedia’s First Two Decades
- From Utopia to Practice and Back
- An Encyclopedia with Breaking News
- Paid with Interest: COI Editing and Its Discontents
II: Connection
6. Wikipedia and Libraries
7. Three Links: Be Bold, Assume Good Faith, and There Are No Firm Rules
8. How Wikipedia Drove Professors Crazy, Made Me Sane, and Almost Saved the Internet
9. The First Twenty Years of Teaching with Wikipedia: From Faculty Enemy to Faculty Enabler
10. Wikipedia as a Role-Playing Game, or Why Some Academics Do Not Like Wikipedia
11. The Most Important Laboratory for Social Scientific and Computing Research in History
12. Collaborating on the Sum of All Knowledge Across Languages
13. Rise of the Underdog
III: Vision
14. Why Do I Have Authority to Edit the Page? The Politics of User Agency and Participation on Wikipedia
15. What We Talk About When We Talk About Community
16. Toward a Wikipedia For and From Us All
17. The Myth of the Comprehensive Historical Archive
18. No Internet, No Problem
19. Possible Enlightenments: Wikipedia’s Encyclopedic Promise and Epistemological Failure
20. Equity, Policy, and Newcomers: Five Journeys from Wiki Education
21. Wikipedia Has a Bias Problem
IV: Capstone
22. Capstone: Making History, Building the Future Together
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