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Revision as of 13:59, 5 January 2006
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Misplaced Pages (pronounced as /ˌwɪkiˈpiːdi.ə/ or /ˌwɪkə-/) is a multilingual Web-based free-content encyclopedia. Misplaced Pages is written collaboratively by volunteers, allowing articles to be changed by anyone with access to a web browser. The project began on January 15 2001 as a complement to the expert-written Nupedia and is now operated by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation. Misplaced Pages has more than 2,550,000 articles, including more than 900,000 in the English-language version; and as of January 2006 it has more than 750,000 registered users. Since its inception, Misplaced Pages has steadily risen in popularity, and its success has spawned several sister projects. There has, however, been much controversy over its reliability.
Misplaced Pages is regularly cited in the mass media and academia, sometimes critically, and sometimes to praise it for its free distribution, frequent editing, and diverse coverage. It is often cited not as a subject but as source on other subjects. Editors are encouraged to uphold a policy of "neutral point of view" under which notable perspectives are summarized without an attempt to determine an objective truth. Misplaced Pages's status as a reference work has been controversial since its open nature allows vandalism, inaccuracy, inconsistency, uneven quality, and unsubstantiated opinions. It has also been criticised for systemic bias, preference of consensus to credentials, and a perceived lack of accountability and authority when compared with traditional encyclopedias, but the scope and length of its articles, as well as its constant updates, has made it a useful reference source for millions.
There are over 200 language editions of Misplaced Pages, around 100 of which are active. Twelve editions have more than 50,000 articles each: English, German, French, Japanese, Polish, Italian, Swedish, Dutch, Portuguese, Spanish, Chinese and Russian. Its German-language edition has been distributed on DVD-ROM, and many of its other editions are mirrored or have been forked by websites.
Characteristics
Misplaced Pages's slogan is "The 💕 that anyone can edit", and the project is described by its founder Jimmy Wales as "an effort to create and distribute a 💕 of the highest possible quality to every single person on the planet in their own language." It is developed on the wikipedia.org website using a type of software called a "wiki", a term originally used for the WikiWikiWeb and derived from the Hawaiian Wiki Wiki, which means "quick". Wales intends that Misplaced Pages should achieve a "Britannica or better" quality and be published in print.
Several other encyclopedia projects exist or have existed on the Internet. Traditional editorial policies and article ownership are used in some, such as the expert-written Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and the now-defunct Nupedia. More casual websites such as h2g2 or Everything2 serve as general guides, the articles of which are written and controlled by individuals. Projects such as Misplaced Pages, Susning.nu, and the Enciclopedia Libre are wikis in which articles are developed by numerous authors, and there is no formal process of review. Misplaced Pages has become the largest such encyclopedic wiki by article and word-count. Unlike many encyclopedias, it has licensed its content under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Misplaced Pages has a set of policies identifying types of information appropriate for inclusion. These policies are often cited in disputes over whether particular content should be added, revised, transferred to a sister project, or removed.
Free-content
The GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL), the license through which Misplaced Pages's articles are made available, is one of many "copyleft" copyright licenses that permit the redistribution, creation of derivative works, and commercial use of content provided its authors are attributed and this content remains available under the GFDL. When an author contributes original material to the project, the copyright over it is retained with them, but they agree to make the work available under the GFDL. Material on Misplaced Pages may thus be distributed to, or incorporated from, resources which also use this license. Misplaced Pages's content has been mirrored or forked by hundreds of resources from database dumps. Although all text is available under the GFDL, a significant percentage of Misplaced Pages's images and sounds are non-free. Items such as corporate logos, song samples, or copyrighted news photos are used with a claim of fair use. Material has also been given to Misplaced Pages under no-derivative or for-Misplaced Pages-only conditions. However, some editions only accept free media. News organizations have referred to Misplaced Pages articles as sources or in sidebars containing related information on the Web, some regularly. According to lists maintained by Misplaced Pages's editors, its articles have been cited most frequently in the news media. Less frequently, it has been used in academic studies, books, conferences, and court cases. For instance, the Parliament of Canada website refers to Misplaced Pages's article on same-sex marriage in the "further reading" list of Bill C-38. Noncomprehensive lists of such uses are maintained by Wikipedians.
Language editions
Misplaced Pages encompasses 119 "active" language editions as of March 2005. Its five largest editions are, in descending order, English, German, French, Japanese, and Polish. In total, Misplaced Pages contains 205 language editions of varying states with a combined 2.6 million articles.
Language editions operate independently of one another. Editions are not bound to the content of other language editions, and are only held to global policies such as "neutral point of view". Articles and images are nonetheless shared between Misplaced Pages editions, the former through pages to request translations organized on many of the larger language editions, and the latter through the Wikimedia Commons repository. Translated articles represent only a small portion of articles in any edition.
The following is a list of the larger editions, sorted by number of articles as of 18 December 2005. (The article count, however, is a very limited metric for comparing the editions. For instance, in some Misplaced Pages versions nearly half of the articles are stubs which were created automatically by robots.)
- English (6,929,654)
- German (335,093)
- French (215,944)
- Japanese (169,374)
- Polish (156,769)
- Italian (129,669)
- Swedish (125,537)
- Dutch (119,067)
- Portuguese (92,811)
- Spanish (83,361)
- Chinese (51,974)
- Russian (51,089)
- Norwegian Bokmål (44,576)
- Finnish (43,598)
- Danish (36,491)
Editing
Almost all visitors may edit Misplaced Pages's articles, and registered users can create new ones and have their changes instantly displayed. Misplaced Pages is built on the expectation that collaboration among users will improve articles over time, in much the same way that open-source software develops. Further, this real-time, collaborative model allows rapid updating of existing topics and introduction of new topics. The authors need not have any expertise or formal qualifications in the subjects which they edit, and users are warned that their contributions may be "edited mercilessly and redistributed at will" by anyone who so wishes. Its articles are not controlled by any particular user or editorial group. Decision-making on the content and editorial policies of Misplaced Pages is instead done by consensus and occasionally by vote. Jimmy Wales retains final judgement on Misplaced Pages policies and user guidelines.
By the nature of its openness, "edit wars" and prolonged disputes often occur when editors do not agree. A few members of its community have explained its editing process as a collaborative work, a "socially Darwinian evolutionary process", but this is not generally considered by the community to be an accurate self-description. Articles are always subject to editing, unless the article is protected for a short time due to vandalism or revert wars; therefore, Misplaced Pages does not declare any article finished. Some users attempt to enter malicious or amusing but irrelevant information, but changes of this sort are normally removed quickly.
Regular users often maintain a 'watchlist' of articles of interest to them, so that they are immediately shown which of these articles have changed since their last log in. This allows monitoring of daily editing to prevent false information and spam, and also to keep up with other editors' views, or updates, of the subjects on the watchlist.
Because of the Wiki-principle, all edits of a Misplaced Pages article are kept in an edit history which can be looked at by everyone. Therefore, Misplaced Pages is also the first major encyclopedia ever, where everybody can see how an article evolved over time and if, or how and where the content of an article was controversial. All controversial standpoints which were once voiced and afterwards deleted and even plain page vandalism remain visible for everyone and provide additional information about the article's topic and its degree of controversy and add the dimension of time to every article.
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History
Main article: History of Misplaced PagesMisplaced Pages began as a complementary project of Nupedia, a free online encyclopedia project whose articles were written by experts through a formal process. Nupedia was founded on 9 March 2000 under the ownership of Bomis, Inc, a Web portal company. Its principal figures were Jimmy Wales, Bomis CEO, and Larry Sanger, editor-in-chief for Nupedia and later Misplaced Pages. Nupedia was described by Sanger as differing from existing encyclopedias in being open content; not having size limitations, as it was on the Internet; and being free of bias, due to its public nature and potentially broad base of contributors. Nupedia had a seven-step review process by appointed subject-area experts, but was later widely viewed as too slow for producing a limited number of articles. Funded by Bomis, there were initial plans to recoup its investment by the use of advertisements. It was licensed under its own Nupedia Open Content License initially, switching to the GNU Free Documentation License prior to Misplaced Pages's founding at the urging of Richard Stallman.
On January 10, 2001, Larry Sanger proposed on the Nupedia mailing list to create a wiki alongside Nupedia. Under the subject "Let's make a wiki", he wrote:
No, this is not an indecent proposal. It's an idea to add a little feature to Nupedia. Jimmy Wales thinks that many people might find the idea objectionable, but I think not. (...) As to Nupedia's use of a wiki, this is the ULTIMATE "open" and simple format for developing content. We have occasionally bandied about ideas for simpler, more open projects to either replace or supplement Nupedia. It seems to me wikis can be implemented practically instantly, need very little maintenance, and in general are very low-risk. They're also a potentially great source for content. So there's little downside, as far as I can see.
Misplaced Pages was formally launched on 15 January 2001, as a single English-language edition at wikipedia.com, and announced by Sanger on the Nupedia mailing list. It had been, from 10 January, a feature of Nupedia.com in which the public could write articles that could be incorporated into Nupedia after review. It was relaunched off-site after Nupedia's Advisory Board of subject experts disapproved of its production model. Misplaced Pages thereafter operated as a standalone project without control from Nupedia. Its policy of "neutral point-of-view" was codified in its initial months, though it is similar to Nupedia's earlier "nonbias" policy. There were otherwise few rules initially. Misplaced Pages gained early contributors from Nupedia, Slashdot postings, and search engine indexing. It grew to approximately 20,000 articles among 18 language editions by the end of its first year. It had 26 language editions by the end of 2002, 46 by the end of 2003, and 161 by the end of 2004. Nupedia and Misplaced Pages coexisted until the former's servers went down, permanently, in 2003, and its text was incorporated into Misplaced Pages.
Wales and Sanger attribute the concept of using a wiki to Ward Cunningham's WikiWikiWeb or Portland Pattern Repository. Wales mentioned that he heard the concept first from Jeremy Rosenfeld, an employee of Bomis who showed him the same wiki, in December 2000, but it was after Sanger heard of its existence from Ben Kovitz, a regular at this wiki, in January 2001, and proposed a creation of a wiki for Nupedia to Wales that Misplaced Pages's history started. Under a similar concept of free content, though not wiki production, the GNUPedia project existed alongside Nupedia early in its history. It subsequently became inactive and its creator, free-software figure Richard Stallman, lent his support to Misplaced Pages.
Citing fear of commercial advertising and lack of control in a perceived English-centric Misplaced Pages, users of the Spanish Misplaced Pages forked from Misplaced Pages to create the Enciclopedia Libre in February 2002. Later that year, Wales announced that Misplaced Pages would not display advertisements, and moved its website to wikipedia.org. Projects have since forked from Misplaced Pages's content for editorial reasons, such as Wikinfo, which abandoned "neutral point-of-view" in favor of multiple complementary articles written from a "sympathetic point-of-view."
From Misplaced Pages and Nupedia, the Wikimedia Foundation was created on June 20, 2003. Misplaced Pages and its sister projects thereafter operated under this non-profit organization. Misplaced Pages's first sister project, "In Memoriam: September 11 Wiki" had been created in October 2002 to detail the September 11, 2001 attacks; Wiktionary, a dictionary project, was launched in December 2002; Wikiquote, a collection of quotes, a week after Wikimedia launched; and Wikibooks, a collection of collaboratively-written free books, the next month. Wikimedia has since started a number of other projects, detailed below.
Misplaced Pages has traditionally measured its status by article count. In its first two years, it grew at a few hundred or fewer new articles per day. The English Misplaced Pages reached a 100,000 article milestone on January 22, 2003. In 2004, its article growth rate was approximately 1,000 to 3,000 per day in all editions. In the English edition it reached 500,000 articles on February 25, 2004. Misplaced Pages reached its one millionth article among 105 language editions on September 20, 2004.
The brand Misplaced Pages has been trademarked in the European Union (January 20th 2005), Japan (December 16th, 2004) and the USA (September 17th, 2004) in the area "Provision of information in the field of general encyclopedic knowledge via the Internet" by the Wikimedia Foundation. There are currently plans to license the usage of the Misplaced Pages trademark for some products like books or DVDs.
Details are described on meta:Wikimedia trademarks.
Software and hardware
Misplaced Pages is run by MediaWiki free software on a cluster of dedicated servers located in Florida and three other locations around the world. MediaWiki is Phase III of the program's software. Originally, Misplaced Pages ran on UseModWiki by Clifford Adams (Phase I). At first it required CamelCase for links; later it was also possible to use double brackets. Misplaced Pages began running on a PHP wiki engine with a MySQL database in January 2002. This software, Phase II, was written specifically for the Misplaced Pages project by Magnus Manske. Several rounds of modifications were made to improve performance in response to increased demand. Ultimately, the software was rewritten again, this time by Lee Daniel Crocker. Instituted in July 2002, this Phase III software was called MediaWiki. It was licensed under the GNU General Public License and used by all Wikimedia projects.
Misplaced Pages was served from a single server until 2003, when the server setup was expanded into an n-tier distributed architecture. In January 2005, the project ran on 39 dedicated servers located in Florida. This configuration included a single master database server running MySQL, multiple slave database servers, 21 web servers running the Apache software, and seven Squid cache servers. By September 2005, its server cluster had grown to around 100 servers in four locations around the world.
Page requests are processed by first passing to a front-end layer of Squid caching servers. Requests that cannot be served from the Squid cache are sent to two load-balancing servers running the Perlbal software, which then pass the request to one of the Apache web servers for page-rendering from the database. The web servers serve pages as requested, performing page rendering for all the Wikipedias. To increase speed further, rendered pages for anonymous users are cached in a filesystem until invalidated, allowing page rendering to be skipped entirely for most common page accesses. Wikimedia has begun building a global network of caching servers with the addition of three such servers in France. A new Dutch cluster is also online now. In spite of all this, Misplaced Pages page load times remain quite variable. The ongoing status of Misplaced Pages's website is posted by users at a status page on OpenFacts.
Sister projects
Misplaced Pages has sister projects that fulfill non-encyclopedic roles. All of them are multilingual, free content wikis administered by the Wikimedia Foundation. These include:
- Wikibooks, for free textbooks;
- Wikinews, for free news;
- Wikiquote, a free anthology of quotations;
- Wikisource, a free library;
- Wikispecies, a free directory of life;
- and Wiktionary, a free dictionary.
In addition, two special projects serve all of the sister projects (including Misplaced Pages) in all of their languages at once. These are:
- the Wikimedia Commons, which is a shared media repository (images, sound, video) that can be utilized by all Wikimedia wikis;
- and the Wikimedia Meta-Wiki for coordination and planning across all projects.
Alternative spellings
Here is a list of alternate spellings for Misplaced Pages according to the language editions:
- Bichipedia - Sardinian
- Biquipedia - Aragonese
- Uichipedia - Aromanian
- Uiquipedia - Asturian
- Vicipéid - Irish
- Vikipedio - Esperanto
- Vikipedi - Turkish
- Vikipeedia - Estonian
- Viquipèdia - Catalan
- Vicipaedia - Latin
- Wicipedia - Welsh
- Wikipédia - French, Portuguese, Hungarian
- Misplaced Pages - English, Breton, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Somali, German, Italian, Nauruan, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Sicilian, Spanish, Swedish, Tagalog, Corsican
- Wikipedio - Ido
- ويكيبيديا - Arabic
- วิกิพีเดีย - Thai
- ウィキペディア - Japanese
- Wéijībǎikē 维基百科 - Chinese
- Βικιπαίδεια - Greek
- Уикипедия - Bulgarian
- ויקיפדיה - Hebrew
- ויקיפעדיע - Yiddish
- Википедия - Russian
- Вікіпедія - Ukrainian
- Wikipedija - Bosnian, Croatian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovenian
- ویکیپدیا - Persian
- Википедиja - Macedonian, Serbo-Croatian, Serbian
- ვიკიპედია - Georgian
- विकिपीडिया - Hindi
- ویـکـیـپـیـڈ یـا - Urdu
- uikiPEdi,as - Lojban
- 위키백과 - Korean
- ವಿಕಿಪೀಡಿಯ - Kannada
- Oiquipedià - Occitan
- விக்கிபீடியா - Tamil
- Википеди - Ossetic
- विकिपीडिया - Hindi, Marathi, Sanskrit
- Wîkîpediya - Kurdish
- Википеди - Chuvash
- Wikipedy - Western Frisian
- వికిపీడియా - Telugu
- Wîkîpedîä - Tatar
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. |
See also
- Internet encyclopedia project
- Uncyclopedia, parody of Misplaced Pages
- Criticism of Misplaced Pages
- Who writes Misplaced Pages
References
- See plots at "Visits per day", Misplaced Pages Statistics, 1 January 2005.
- Jimmy Wales, "Misplaced Pages is an encyclopedia", 8 March 2005, <wikipedia-l@wikimedia.org>.
- For example, see statistics and licenses on the English edition at "Misplaced Pages:Image copyright tags", Misplaced Pages (9 March 2005).
- Andrew Lih, "Misplaced Pages as Participatory Journalism: Reliable Sources? Metrics for evaluating collaborative media as a news resource" (PDF), 5th International Symposium on Online Journalism, April 2004.
- "Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages as a press source 2005", Misplaced Pages (28 March 2005).
- "C-38", LEGISINFO (28 March 2005).
- Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages as a source
- "Complete list of language Wikipedias available", Meta-Wiki (22 May 2005).
- "All languages", Misplaced Pages statistics, 21 March 2005.
- For example, "Misplaced Pages: Translation into English," Misplaced Pages. (9 March 2005).
- "Complete list of language Wikipedias available", Meta Wikimedia (28 March 2005).
- "Power structure", Meta-Wiki, 10:55 4 April 2005.
- "Misplaced Pages:Edit war", Misplaced Pages (26 March 2005).
- "Misplaced Pages sociology", Meta-Wiki, 23:30 24 March 2005.
- O'Neill, Rob (20 September 2005). "World of knowledge in your hands".
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- Larry Sanger, "Q & A about Nupedia", Nupedia, March 2000.
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- Sanger, Larry (18 April 2005). "The Early History of Nupedia and Misplaced Pages: A Memoir".
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- Jimmy Wales, "Re: Sanger's memoirs", 20 April 2005,<wikipedia-l@wikipedia.org>.
- Sanger, Larry (18 April 2005). "The Early History of Nupedia and Misplaced Pages: A Memoir".
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- "500,000 Misplaced Pages articles", Wikimedia Foundation, 25 February 2004.
- See "Misplaced Pages Reaches One Million Articles", Wikimedia Foundation, 20 September 2004.
- Template:News reference
Further reading
- Fernanda B. Viegas, Martin Wattenberg, and Kushal Dave, "Studying Cooperation and Conflict between Authors with history flow Visualizations", CHI 2004 April 24 - April 29 2004. Preliminary report "History Flow" available on the IBM website.
- Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages in academic studies
- Misplaced Pages:Introduction
- Misplaced Pages:FAQ
- Misplaced Pages:Press releases
- Misplaced Pages:Press coverage
- Misplaced Pages:Why Misplaced Pages is not so great
- Misplaced Pages:Replies to common objections
- Statistics
- Open Directory Project: Misplaced Pages
- OpenFacts: Copies of Misplaced Pages content
- SourceWatch: Misplaced Pages
External links
Listen to this article(2 parts, 33 minutes) These audio files were created from a revision of this article dated Error: no date provided, and do not reflect subsequent edits.(Audio help · More spoken articles)
- wikipedia.org, multi-lingual portal
- en.wikipedia.org, English language edition
- Meta-Wiki, policy-related and technical discussions regarding Wikimedia
- Wikimedia Foundation, parent organization of Misplaced Pages
- Larry Sanger on the origins of Misplaced Pages from MemoryWiki.org
- BBC article showing flaws in wikipedia
- Guardian UK article
- "Interview with Misplaced Pages founder Jimmy Wales," nPost, November 1 2005.
- Good example of making use of Wiki on a Pink Floyd website
- Misplaced Pages ASCII Art Collection, with rss-feed and XML serialization
- Misplaced Pages Signpost, newspaper about the English Misplaced Pages
- Misplaced Pages in the news. Aggregated news and rss-feed.(Multilingual)
- Why Misplaced Pages will survive the storm, from News.com
- How Stuff Works-Misplaced Pages, A brief guide about how Misplaced Pages works
- Nature comparison between Misplaced Pages and Britannica
- Criticism of the Misplaced Pages, An opinion of the downside of Misplaced Pages.
- Misplaced Pages Founder Edits Own Bio, Wired article on Jimbo vs Sanger
- A false Misplaced Pages 'biography', the USA Today editorial which sparked the late 2005 controversy.
- Misplaced Pages Class Action, a planned lawsuit against Wikimedia.
- Misplaced Pages Watch, an unfavorable website
- Nature: Misplaced Pages as accurate as Britannica, Nature article finds that Misplaced Pages is about as accurate as encyclopedia Britannica when it comes to science entries.