Misplaced Pages

Reliability of - Misplaced Pages

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"Misplaced Pages hoaxes" redirects here. For a list of hoaxes that have occurred on Misplaced Pages, see Misplaced Pages:List of hoaxes on Misplaced Pages.
Vandalism of a Misplaced Pages article. The section on the left is the normal, undamaged version; and on the right is the vandalized, damaged version.

The reliability of Misplaced Pages (predominantly of the English-language edition) has been frequently questioned and often assessed. The reliability has been tested statistically, through comparative review, analysis of the historical patterns, and strengths and weaknesses inherent in the editing process unique to Misplaced Pages. Incidents of conflicted editing, and the use of Misplaced Pages for 'revenge editing' (inserting false, defamatory or biased statements into biographies) have attracted publicity.

A study in the journal Nature said that in 2005, Misplaced Pages's scientific articles came close to the level of accuracy in Encyclopædia Britannica and had a similar rate of "serious errors". Encyclopædia Britannica disputed the Nature study, and Nature replied with a formal response and point-by-point rebuttal of Britannica's main objections. Between 2008 and 2012, Misplaced Pages articles on medical and scientific fields such as pathology, toxicology, oncology, pharmaceuticals, and psychiatry were compared to professional and peer-reviewed sources and it was found that Misplaced Pages's depth and coverage were of a high standard. Concerns regarding readability were raised in a study published by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and a study published in Psychological Medicine (2012), while a study published in the European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology raised concerns about reliability.

A South American coati. In July 2008, a 17-year-old student added an invented nickname to the Misplaced Pages article coati as a private joke, saying coatis were also known as "Brazilian aardvarks". The false information lasted for six years in Misplaced Pages and came to be propagated by hundreds of websites, several newspapers (one of which was later cited as a source in Misplaced Pages), and even books published by university presses.

Because Misplaced Pages is open to anonymous and collaborative editing, assessments of its reliability often examine how quickly false or misleading information is removed. A study conducted by IBM researchers in 2003—two years following Misplaced Pages's establishment—found that "vandalism is usually repaired extremely quickly—so quickly that most users will never see its effects" and concluded that Misplaced Pages had "surprisingly effective self-healing capabilities".

False information has sometimes lasted for a long time on Misplaced Pages. In May 2005, an editor sparked controversy by creating an article about John Seigenthaler that included false and defamatory statements. The inaccurate information remained uncorrected for four months. A biographical article on French Misplaced Pages portrayed a "Léon-Robert de L'Astran" as an 18th-century anti-slavery ship owner, which led Ségolène Royal, a presidential candidate, to praise him. A student investigation determined that the article was a hoax and de L'Astran had never existed. Journalists from a spectrum of publications have similarly been embarrassed by repeating mistaken or fake information.

Misplaced Pages editing model

Misplaced Pages allows anonymous editing; contributors are not required to provide any identification, or even an email address. A 2007 study at Dartmouth College of the English Misplaced Pages noted that, contrary to usual social expectations, anonymous editors were some of Misplaced Pages's most productive contributors of valid content. However, the Dartmouth study was criticized by John Timmer of the Ars Technica website for its methodological shortcomings.

Misplaced Pages trusts the same community to self-regulate and become more proficient at quality control. Misplaced Pages has harnessed the work of millions of people to produce the world's largest knowledge-based site along with software to support it, resulting in more than nineteen million articles written, across more than 280 different language versions, in fewer than twelve years. For this reason, there has been considerable interest in the project both academically and from diverse fields such as information technology, business, project management, knowledge acquisition, software programming, other collaborative projects and sociology, to explore whether the Misplaced Pages model can produce quality results, what collaboration in this way can reveal about people, and whether the scale of involvement can overcome the obstacles of individual limitations and poor editorship which would otherwise arise.

Areas of reliability

Article instability and susceptibility to bias are two potential problem areas in a crowdsourced work like Misplaced Pages

The reliability of Misplaced Pages articles can be measured by the following criteria:

  • Accuracy of information provided within articles
  • Appropriateness of the images provided with the article
  • Appropriateness of the style and focus of the articles
  • Susceptibility to, and exclusion and removal of, false information
  • Comprehensiveness, scope and coverage within articles and in the range of articles
  • Identification of reputable third-party sources as citations
  • Stability of the articles
  • Susceptibility to editorial and systemic bias
  • Quality of writing.

The first four of these have been the subjects of various studies of the project, while the presence of bias is strongly disputed, and the prevalence and quality of citations can be tested within Misplaced Pages. In addition, the scientific research in the area of computational mechanism for trust and reputation in virtual societies was oriented to increase the reliability and performance of electronic communities such as Misplaced Pages with more quantitative methods and temporal factors.

In contrast with all the previous intrinsic metrics, several "market-oriented" extrinsic measures demonstrate that large audiences trust Misplaced Pages in one way or another. For instance, "50 percent of physicians report that they've consulted ... for information on health conditions", according to a report from IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics.

Assessments

Comparative studies

On October 24, 2005, British newspaper The Guardian published a story titled "Can you trust Misplaced Pages?" in which a panel of experts were asked to review seven entries related to their fields, giving each article reviewed a number designation out of ten points. Scores ranged from 0 to 8, but most received marks between 5 and 8. The most common criticisms were:

  1. Poor prose, or ease-of-reading issues (3 mentions)
  2. Omissions or inaccuracies, often small but including key omissions in some articles (3 mentions)
  3. Poor balance, with less important areas being given more attention and vice versa (1 mention)

The most common praises were:

  1. Factually sound and correct, no glaring inaccuracies (4 mentions)
  2. Much useful information, including well selected links, making it possible to "access much information quickly" (3 mentions)

In December 2005, the journal Nature published results of an attempted blind study seeking reviewer evaluations of the accuracy of a small subset of articles from Misplaced Pages and Encyclopædia Britannica. The non-peer-reviewed study was based on Nature's selection of 42 articles on scientific topics, including biographies of well-known scientists. The articles were compared for accuracy by anonymous academic reviewers, a customary practice for journal article reviews. Based on their reviews, on average the Misplaced Pages articles were described as containing 4 errors or omissions, while the Britannica articles contained 3. Only 4 serious errors were found in Misplaced Pages, and 4 in Britannica. The study concluded that "Misplaced Pages comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries", although Misplaced Pages's articles were often "poorly structured".

Encyclopædia Britannica expressed concerns, leading Nature to release further documentation of its survey method. Based on this additional information, Encyclopædia Britannica denied the validity of the Nature study, stating that it was "fatally flawed". Among Britannica's criticisms were that excerpts rather than the full texts of some of their articles were used, that some of the extracts were compilations that included articles written for the youth version, that Nature did not check the factual assertions of its reviewers, and that many points the reviewers labeled as errors were differences of editorial opinion. Britannica further stated that "While the heading proclaimed that 'Misplaced Pages comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries,' the numbers buried deep in the body of the article said precisely the opposite: Misplaced Pages in fact had a third more inaccuracies than Britannica. (As we demonstrate below, Nature's research grossly exaggerated Britannica's inaccuracies, so we cite this figure only to point out the slanted way in which the numbers were presented.)" Nature acknowledged the compiled nature of some of the Britannica extracts, but denied that this invalidated the conclusions of the study. Encyclopædia Britannica also argued that a breakdown of the errors indicated that the mistakes in Misplaced Pages were more often the inclusion of incorrect facts, while the mistakes in Britannica were "errors of omission", making "Britannica far more accurate than Misplaced Pages, according to the figures". Nature has since rejected the Britannica response, stating that any errors on the part of its reviewers were not biased in favor of either encyclopedia, that in some cases it used excerpts of articles from both encyclopedias, and that Britannica did not share particular concerns with Nature before publishing its "open letter" rebuttal.

The point-for-point disagreement between these two parties that addressed the compilation/text excerpting and very small sample size issues—argued to bias the outcome in favor of Misplaced Pages, versus a comprehensive, full article, large sample size study favoring the quality-controlled format of Britannica—have been echoed in online discussions, including of articles citing the Nature study, e.g., where a "flawed study design" for manual selection of articles/article portions, the lack of study "statistical power" in its comparing 4 × 10 articles from > 10 Britannica and > 10 English Misplaced Pages articles, and the absence of any study statistical analyses (e.g., reported confidence intervals for study results) has also been noted.

In June 2006, Roy Rosenzweig, a professor specializing in American history, published a comparison of the Misplaced Pages biographies of 25 Americans to the corresponding biographies found on Encarta and American National Biography Online. He wrote that Misplaced Pages is "surprisingly accurate in reporting names, dates, and events in U.S. history" and described some of the errors as "widely held but inaccurate beliefs". However, he stated that Misplaced Pages often fails to distinguish important from trivial details, and does not provide the best references. He also complained about Misplaced Pages's lack of "persuasive analysis and interpretations, and clear and engaging prose". Misplaced Pages's policies on original research, including unpublished synthesis of published data, disallow new analysis and interpretation not found in reliable sources.

A web-based survey conducted from December 2005 to May 2006 by Larry Press, a professor of Information Systems at California State University at Dominguez Hills, assessed the "accuracy and completeness of Misplaced Pages articles". Fifty people accepted an invitation to assess an article. Of the fifty, seventy-six percent (76%) agreed or strongly agreed that the Misplaced Pages article was accurate, and forty-six percent (46%) agreed or strongly agreed that it was complete. Eighteen people compared the article they reviewed to the article on the same topic in the Encyclopædia Britannica. Opinions on accuracy were almost equal between the two encyclopedias (6 favoring Britannica, 7 favoring Misplaced Pages, 5 stating they were equal), and eleven of the eighteen (61%) found Misplaced Pages somewhat or substantially more complete, compared to seven of the eighteen (39%) for Britannica. The survey did not attempt random selection of the participants, and it is not clear how the participants were invited.

The German computing magazine c't performed a comparison of Brockhaus Multimedial, Microsoft Encarta, and the German Misplaced Pages in October 2004: Experts evaluated 66 articles in various fields. In overall score, Misplaced Pages was rated 3.6 out of 5 points (B-). A second test by c't in February 2007 used 150 search terms, of which 56 were closely evaluated, to compare four digital encyclopedias: Bertelsmann Enzyklopädie 2007, Brockhaus Multimedial premium 2007, Encarta 2007 Enzyklopädie and Misplaced Pages. It concluded: "We did not find more errors in the texts of the 💕 than in those of its commercial competitors."

Viewing Misplaced Pages as fitting the economists' definition of a perfectly competitive marketplace of ideas, George Bragues (University of Guelph-Humber), examined Misplaced Pages's articles on seven top Western philosophers: Aristotle, Plato, Immanuel Kant, René Descartes, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Thomas Aquinas, and John Locke. Misplaced Pages's articles were compared to a consensus list of themes culled from four reference works in philosophy. Bragues found that, on average, Misplaced Pages's articles only covered 52% of consensus themes. No errors were found, though there were significant omissions.

PC Pro magazine (August 2007) asked experts to compare four articles (a small sample) in their scientific fields between Misplaced Pages, Britannica and Encarta. In each case Misplaced Pages was described as "largely sound", "well handled", "performs well", "good for the bare facts" and "broadly accurate". One article had "a marked deterioration towards the end" while another had "clearer and more elegant" writing, a third was assessed as less well written but better detailed than its competitors, and a fourth was "of more benefit to the serious student than its Encarta or Britannica equivalents". No serious errors were noted in Misplaced Pages articles, whereas serious errors were noted in one Encarta and one Britannica article.

In October 2007, Australian magazine PC Authority published a feature article on the accuracy of Misplaced Pages. The article compared Misplaced Pages's content to other popular online encyclopedias, namely Britannica and Encarta. The magazine asked experts to evaluate articles pertaining to their field. A total of four articles were reviewed by three experts. Misplaced Pages was comparable to the other encyclopedias, topping the chemistry category.

In December 2007, German magazine Stern published the results of a comparison between the German Misplaced Pages and the online version of the 15-volume edition of Brockhaus Enzyklopädie. The test was commissioned to a research institute (Cologne-based WIND GmbH), whose analysts assessed 50 articles from each encyclopedia (covering politics, business, sports, science, culture, entertainment, geography, medicine, history and religion) on four criteria (accuracy, completeness, timeliness and clarity), and judged Misplaced Pages articles to be more accurate on the average (1.6 on a scale from 1 to 6 versus 2.3 for Brockhaus, with 1 as the best and 6 as the worst). Misplaced Pages's coverage was also found to be more complete and up to date; however, Brockhaus was judged to be more clearly written, while several Misplaced Pages articles were criticized as being too complicated for non-experts, and many as too lengthy.

In its April 2008 issue British computing magazine PC Plus compared the English Misplaced Pages with the DVD editions of World Book Encyclopedia and Encyclopædia Britannica, assessing for each the coverage of a series of random subjects. It concluded, "The quality of content is good in all three cases" and advised Misplaced Pages users "Be aware that erroneous edits do occur, and check anything that seems outlandish with a second source. But the vast majority of Misplaced Pages is filled with valuable and accurate information."

A 2008 paper in Reference Services Review compared nine Misplaced Pages entries on historical topics to their counterparts in Encyclopædia Britannica, The Dictionary of American History and American National Biography Online. The paper found that Misplaced Pages's entries had an overall accuracy rate of 80 percent, whereas the other encyclopedias had an accuracy rate of 95 to 96 percent.

A 2010 study assessed the extent to which Misplaced Pages pages about the history of countries conformed to the site's policy of verifiability. It found that, in contradiction of this policy, many claims in these articles were not supported by citations, and that many of those that were sourced to popular media and government websites, rather than to academic journal articles.

In April 2011, a study was published by Adam Brown of Brigham Young University in the journal PS Political Science & Politics which examined "thousands of Misplaced Pages articles about candidates, elections, and officeholders". The study found that while information in these articles tended to be accurate, the articles examined contained many errors of omission.

A 2012 study co-authored by Shane Greenstein examined a decade of Misplaced Pages articles on United States politics and found that the more contributors there were to a given article, the more neutral it tended to be, in line with a narrow interpretation of Linus's Law.

Reavley et al. (2012) compared the quality of articles on select mental health topics on Misplaced Pages with corresponding articles in Encyclopædia Britannica and a psychiatry textbook. They asked experts to rate article content with regard to accuracy, up-to-dateness, breadth of coverage, referencing and readability. Misplaced Pages scored highest on all criteria except readability, and the authors concluded that Misplaced Pages is as good as or better than Britannica and a standard textbook.

A 2014 perspective piece in the New England Journal of Medicine examined Misplaced Pages pages about 22 prescription drugs to determine if they had been updated to include the most recent FDA safety warnings. It found that 41% of these pages were updated within two weeks after the warning, 23% were updated more than two weeks later, and the remaining 36% had not been updated to include the warning as of more than 1 year later as of January 2014.

A 2014 study in the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association examined 19 Misplaced Pages articles about herbal supplements, and concluded that all of these articles contained information about their "therapeutic uses and adverse effects", but also concluded that "several lacked information on drug interactions, pregnancy, and contraindications". The study's authors therefore recommended that patients not rely solely on Misplaced Pages as a source for information about the herbal supplements in question.

Another study published in 2014 in PLOS ONE found that Misplaced Pages's information about pharmacology was 99.7% accurate when compared to a pharmacology textbook, and that the completeness of such information on Misplaced Pages was 83.8%. The study also determined that completeness of these Misplaced Pages articles was lowest (68%) in the category "pharmacokinetics" and highest (91.3%) in the category "indication". The authors concluded that "Misplaced Pages is an accurate and comprehensive source of drug-related information for undergraduate medical education".

Expert opinion

Librarians' views

In a 2004 interview with The Guardian, self-described information specialist and Internet consultant Philip Bradley said that he would not use Misplaced Pages and was "not aware of a single librarian who would". He then explained that "the main problem is the lack of authority. With printed publications, the publishers have to ensure that their data are reliable, as their livelihood depends on it. But with something like this, all that goes out the window."

A 2006 review of Misplaced Pages by Library Journal, using a panel of librarians, "the toughest critics of reference materials, whatever their format", asked "long standing reviewers" to evaluate three areas of Misplaced Pages (popular culture, current affairs, and science), and concluded: "While there are still reasons to proceed with caution when using a resource that takes pride in limited professional management, many encouraging signs suggest that (at least for now) Misplaced Pages may be granted the librarian's seal of approval". A reviewer who "decided to explore controversial historical and current events, hoping to find glaring abuses" said, "I was pleased by Misplaced Pages's objective presentation of controversial subjects" but that "as with much information floating around in cyberspace, a healthy degree of skepticism and skill at winnowing fact from opinion are required". Other reviewers noted that there is "much variation" but "good content abounds".

In 2007, Michael Gorman, former president of the American Library Association (ALA) stated in an Encyclopædia Britannica blog that "A professor who encourages the use of Misplaced Pages is the intellectual equivalent of a dietician who recommends a steady diet of Big Macs with everything".

The library at Trent University in Ontario states of Misplaced Pages that many articles are "long and comprehensive", but that there is "a lot of room for misinformation and bias a lot of variability in both the quality and depth of articles". It adds that Misplaced Pages has advantages and limitations, that it has "excellent coverage of technical topics" and articles are "often added quickly and, as a result, coverage of current events is quite good", comparing this to traditional sources which are unable to achieve this task. It concludes that, depending upon the need, one should think critically and assess the appropriateness of one's sources, "whether you are looking for fact or opinion, how in-depth you want to be as you explore a topic, the importance of reliability and accuracy, and the importance of timely or recent information", and adds that Misplaced Pages can be used in any event as a "starting point".

A 2006 article for the Canadian Library Association (CLA) discusses the Misplaced Pages approach, process and outcome in depth, commenting for example that in controversial topics, "what is most remarkable is that the two sides actually engaged each other and negotiated a version of the article that both can more or less live with". The author comments that:

In fact Misplaced Pages has more institutional structure than at first appears. Some 800 experienced users are designated as administrators, with special powers of binding and loosing: they can protect and unprotect, delete and undelete and revert articles, and block and unblock users. They are expected to use their powers in a neutral way, forming and implementing the consensus of the community. The effect of their intervention shows in the discussion pages of most contentious articles. Misplaced Pages has survived this long because it is easier to reverse vandalism than it is to commit it...

Information Today (March 2006) cites librarian Nancy O'Neill (principal librarian for Reference Services at the Santa Monica Public Library System) as saying that "there is a good deal of skepticism about Misplaced Pages in the library community" but that "she also admits cheerfully that Misplaced Pages makes a good starting place for a search. You get terminology, names, and a feel for the subject."

PC Pro (August 2007) cites the head of the European and American Collection at the British Library, Stephen Bury, as stating "Misplaced Pages is potentially a good thing—it provides a speedier response to new events, and to new evidence on old items". The article concludes: "For , the problem isn't so much the reliability of Misplaced Pages's content so much as the way in which it's used." "It's already become the first port of call for the researcher", Bury says, before noting that this is "not necessarily problematic except when they go no further". According to Bury, the trick to using Misplaced Pages is to understand that "just because it's in an encyclopedia (free, web or printed) doesn't mean it's true. Ask for evidence ... and contribute."

Academe

This section's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Misplaced Pages. See Misplaced Pages's guide to writing better articles for suggestions. (April 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Academics have also criticized Misplaced Pages for its perceived failure as a reliable source and because Misplaced Pages editors may have no expertise, competence, or credentials in the topics on which they contribute. Adrian Riskin, a mathematician in Whittier College commented that while highly technical articles may be written by mathematicians for mathematicians, the more general maths topics, such as the article on polynomials, are written in a very amateurish fashion with a number of obvious mistakes.

Because Misplaced Pages cannot be considered a reliable source, the use of Misplaced Pages is not accepted in many schools and universities in writing a formal paper, and some educational institutions have banned it as a primary source while others have limited its use to only a pointer to external sources. The criticism of not being a reliable source, however, may not only apply to Misplaced Pages but to encyclopedias in general—some university lecturers are not impressed when students cite print-based encyclopedias in assigned work. However, it seems that instructors have underestimated the use of Misplaced Pages in academia because of these concerns. Researchers and academics contend that while Misplaced Pages may not be used as a 100 percent accurate source for final papers, it is a valuable jumping off point for research that can lead to many possibilities if approached critically. What may be missing in academia is the emphasis on critical analysis in regards to the use of Misplaced Pages in secondary and higher education. We should not dismiss Misplaced Pages entirely (there are less inaccuracies than there are errors of omission) but rather begin to support it, and teach the use of Misplaced Pages as an education tool in tandem with critical thinking skills that will allow students to filter the information found on the online encyclopedia and help them critically analyze their findings.

An empirical study conducted in 2006 by a Nottingham University Business School lecturer in Information Systems, the subject of a review on the technical website Ars Technica, involving 55 academics asked to review specific Misplaced Pages articles that either were in their expert field (group 1) or chosen at random (group 2), concluded that: "The experts found Misplaced Pages's articles to be more credible than the non-experts. This suggests that the accuracy of Misplaced Pages is high. However, the results should not be seen as support for Misplaced Pages as a totally reliable resource as, according to the experts, 13 percent of the articles contain mistakes (10% of the experts reported factual errors of an unspecified degree, 3% of them reported spelling errors)."

The Gould Library at Carleton College in Minnesota has a web-page describing the use of Misplaced Pages in academia. It asserts that "Misplaced Pages is without question a valuable and informative resource", but that "there is an inherent lack of reliability and stability" to its articles, again drawing attention to similar advantages and limitations as other sources. As with other reviews it comments that one should assess one's sources and what is desired from them, and that "Misplaced Pages may be an appropriate resource for some assignments, but not for others." It cited Misplaced Pages co-founder Jimmy Wales' view that Misplaced Pages may not be ideal as a source for all academic uses, and (as with other sources) suggests that at the least, one strength of Misplaced Pages is that it provides a good starting point for current information on a very wide range of topics.

In 2007, the Chronicle of Higher Education published an article written by Cathy Davidson, Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies and English at Duke University, in which she asserts that Misplaced Pages should be used to teach students about the concepts of reliability and credibility.

In 2008, Hamlet Isakhanli, founder and president of Khazar University, compared the Encyclopædia Britannica and English Misplaced Pages articles on Azerbaijan and related subjects. His study found that Misplaced Pages covered the subject much more widely, more accurately and in more detail, though with some lack of balance, and that Misplaced Pages was the best source for the first approximation.

Geoffrey Nunberg, an adjunct professor at UC Berkeley's School of Information, has criticized Misplaced Pages for relying too much on citing sources even though the said sources may not be more accurate than Misplaced Pages itself.

Some academic journals do refer to Misplaced Pages articles, but are not elevating it to the same level as traditional references. For instance, Misplaced Pages articles have been referenced in "enhanced perspectives" provided on-line in the journal Science. The first of these perspectives to provide a hyperlink to Misplaced Pages was "A White Collar Protein Senses Blue Light", and dozens of enhanced perspectives have provided such links since then. The publisher of Science states that these enhanced perspectives "include hypernotes—which link directly to websites of other relevant information available online—beyond the standard bibliographic references".

Journalism and use of Misplaced Pages in the newsroom

In his 2014 book Virtual Unreality, Charles Seife, a professor of journalism at New York University, noted Misplaced Pages's susceptibility to hoaxes and misinformation, including manipulation by commercial and political organisations "masquerading as common people" making edits to Misplaced Pages. In conclusion, Seife presented the following advice:

Misplaced Pages is like an old and eccentric uncle.

He can be a lot of fun—over the years he's seen a lot, and he can tell a great story. He's also no dummy; he's accumulated a lot of information and has some strong opinions about what he's gathered. You can learn quite a bit from him. But take everything he says with a grain of salt. A lot of the things he thinks he knows for sure aren't quite right, or are taken out of context. And when it comes down to it, sometimes he believes things that are a little bit, well, nuts.

If it ever matters to you whether something he said is real or fictional, it's crucial to check it out with a more reliable source.

Seife observed that when bogus information from Misplaced Pages spreads to other publications, it sometimes alters truth itself. On 28 June 2012, for example, an anonymous Misplaced Pages contributor added the invented nickname "Millville Meteor" to the Misplaced Pages biography of baseball player Mike Trout. A couple of weeks later, a Newsday sports writer reproduced the nickname in an article, and "with that act, the fake nickname became real". Seife pointed out that while Misplaced Pages, by some standards, could be described as "roughly as accurate" as traditional publications, and is more up to date, "there's a difference between the kind of error one would find in Misplaced Pages and what one would in Britannica or Collier's or even in the now-defunct Microsoft Encarta encyclopedia ... the majority of hoaxes on Misplaced Pages could never have appeared in the old-fashioned encyclopedias." Dwight Garner, reviewing Seife's book in The New York Times, said that he himself had "been burned enough times by bad online information", including "Misplaced Pages howlers", to have adopted a very sceptical mindset.

In November 2012, Lord Leveson was accused of having forgotten "one of the elementary rules of journalism" when he named a "Brett Straub" as one of the founders of The Independent newspaper in his report on the culture, practices and ethics of the British press. The name had been added to the Misplaced Pages article on The Independent over a year prior, and turned out to be that of a 25-year-old Californian, whose friend had added his name to a string of Misplaced Pages pages as a prank. Straub was tracked down by The Telegraph and commented, "The fact someone, especially a judge, has believed something on Misplaced Pages is kind of shocking. My friend went on and edited a bunch of Misplaced Pages pages and put my name there. I knew my friend had done it but I didn't know how to change them back and I thought someone would. At one point I was the creator of Coca-Cola or something. You know how easy it is to change Misplaced Pages. Every time he came across a red linked name he put my name in its place."

A 2016 BBC article by Ciaran McCauley similarly noted that "plenty of mischievous, made-up information has found its way" on to Misplaced Pages and that "many of these fake facts have fallen through the cracks and been taken as gospel by everyone from university academics to major newspapers and broadcasters." Listing examples of journalists being embarrassed by reproducing hoaxes and other falsifications from Misplaced Pages in their writing, including bogus information propagated by major news organisations in their obituaries of Maurice Jarre and Ronnie Hazlehurst, McCauley stated that

any journalist in any newsroom will likely get a sharp slap across the head from an editor for treating Misplaced Pages with anything but total scepticism (you can imagine the kicking I've taken over this article).

The Daily Mail – itself banned as a source on Misplaced Pages in 2017 because of its perceived unreliability – has publicly stated that it "banned all its journalists from using Misplaced Pages as a sole source in 2014 because of its unreliability".

Science and medicine

Main article: Health information on Misplaced Pages

Science and medicine are areas where accuracy is of high importance and peer review is the norm. While some of Misplaced Pages's content has passed a form of peer review, most has not.

A 2008 study examined 80 Misplaced Pages drug entries. The researchers found few factual errors in this set of articles, but determined that these articles were often missing important information, like contraindications and drug interactions. One of the researchers noted that "If people went and used this as a sole or authoritative source without contacting a health professional...those are the types of negative impacts that can occur." The researchers also compared Misplaced Pages to Medscape Drug Reference (MDR), by looking for answers to 80 different questions covering eight categories of drug information, including adverse drug events, dosages, and mechanism of action. They have determined that MDR provided answers to 82.5 percent of the questions, while Misplaced Pages could only answer 40 percent, and that answers were less likely to be complete for Misplaced Pages as well. None of the answers from Misplaced Pages were determined factually inaccurate, while they found four inaccurate answers in MDR. But the researchers found 48 errors of omission in the Misplaced Pages entries, compared to 14 for MDR. The lead investigator concluded: "I think that these errors of omission can be just as dangerous ", and he pointed out that drug company representatives have been caught deleting information from Misplaced Pages entries that make their drugs look unsafe.

A 2009 survey asked US toxicologists how accurately they rated the portrayal of health risks of chemicals in different media sources. It was based on the answers of 937 members of the Society of Toxicology and found that these experts regarded Misplaced Pages's reliability in this area as far higher than that of all traditional news media:

In perhaps the most surprising finding in the entire study, all these national media outlets are easily eclipsed by two representatives of "new media": WebMD and Misplaced Pages. WebMD is the only news source whose coverage of chemical risk is regarded as accurate by a majority (56 percent) of toxicologists, closely followed by Misplaced Pages's 45 percent accuracy rating. By contrast, only 15 percent describe as accurate the portrayals of chemical risk found in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal.

In 2010 researchers compared information about 10 types of cancer on Misplaced Pages to similar data from the National Cancer Institute's Physician Data Query and concluded "the Wiki resource had similar accuracy and depth to the professionally edited database" and that "sub-analysis comparing common to uncommon cancers demonstrated no difference between the two", but that ease of readability was an issue.

A study in 2011 came to the result that categories most frequently absent in Misplaced Pages's drug articles are those of drug interactions and medication use in breastfeeding. Other categories with incomplete coverage were descriptions of off-label indications, contraindications and precautions, adverse drug events and dosing. Information most frequently deviating from other sources used in the study were that of contraindications and precautions, drug absorption and adverse drug events.

A 2012 study reported that Misplaced Pages articles about pediatric otolaryngology contained twice as many errors and omissions as the medical database eMedicine.

In a U.S. study in 2014, 10 researchers examined 10 Misplaced Pages health articles of the most costly medical conditions in the United States and found that 90% of the entries contained errors and statements that contradicted latest medical research. However, according to Stevie Benton of Wikimedia UK the sample size used in the research may have been too small to be considered representative.

A 2014 study published in PLOS One looked at the quality of Misplaced Pages articles on pharmacology, comparing articles from English and German Misplaced Pages with academic textbooks. It found that "the collaborative and participatory design of Misplaced Pages does generate high quality information on pharmacology that is suitable for undergraduate medical education".

Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica

In a 2004 piece called "The Faith-Based Encyclopedia", Robert McHenry, a former editor-in-chief of Encyclopædia Britannica, stated that Misplaced Pages errs in billing itself as an encyclopedia, because that word implies a level of authority and accountability that he believes cannot be possessed by an openly editable reference. McHenry argued that "the typical user doesn't know how conventional encyclopedias achieve reliability, only that they do". He added:

owever closely a Misplaced Pages article may at some point in its life attain to reliability, it is forever open to the uninformed or semiliterate meddler... The user who visits Misplaced Pages to learn about some subject, to confirm some matter of fact, is rather in the position of a visitor to a public restroom. It may be obviously dirty, so that he knows to exercise great care, or it may seem fairly clean, so that he may be lulled into a false sense of security. What he certainly does not know is who has used the facilities before him."

Similarly, Britannica's executive editor, Ted Pappas, was quoted in The Guardian as saying:

The premise of Misplaced Pages is that continuous improvement will lead to perfection. That premise is completely unproven.

In the September 12, 2006 edition of The Wall Street Journal, Jimmy Wales debated with Dale Hoiberg, editor-in-chief of Encyclopædia Britannica. Hoiberg focused on a need for expertise and control in an encyclopedia and cited Lewis Mumford that overwhelming information could "bring about a state of intellectual enervation and depletion hardly to be distinguished from massive ignorance". Wales emphasized Misplaced Pages's differences, and asserted that openness and transparency lead to quality. Hoiberg replied that he "had neither the time nor space to respond to " and "could corral any number of links to articles alleging errors in Misplaced Pages", to which Wales responded: "No problem! Misplaced Pages to the rescue with a fine article", and included a link to the Misplaced Pages article Criticism of Misplaced Pages.

Information loop

Main article: Circular reporting
A diagram of "citogenesis"

Circular reporting was reported to be a reliability problem for Misplaced Pages. Sources accepted as reliable for Misplaced Pages may in fact rely on Misplaced Pages as a reference source, sometimes indirectly. The danger is that if the original information in Misplaced Pages was false, once it has been reported in sources considered reliable, Misplaced Pages may use them to reference the false information, giving an apparent respectability to a falsehood. This in turn increases the likelihood of the false information being reported in other media. A known example is the Sacha Baron Cohen article, where false information added in Misplaced Pages was apparently used by two newspapers, leading to it being treated as reliable in Misplaced Pages. This process of creating reliable sources for false facts has been termed "citogenesis" by webcomic artist Randall Munroe.

Propagation of misinformation

Somewhat related to the "information loop", but perhaps more worrisome, is the propagation of misinformation to other websites (Answers.com is just one of many) which will often quote misinformation from Misplaced Pages verbatim, and without mentioning that it has come from Misplaced Pages. A piece of misinformation originally taken from a Misplaced Pages article will live on in perhaps dozens of other websites, even if Misplaced Pages itself has deleted the unreliable material.

Other

In one article, Information Today (March 2006) likens comparisons between Misplaced Pages and Britannica to "apples and oranges":

Even the revered Encyclopædia Britannica is riddled with errors, not to mention the subtle yet pervasive biases of individual subjectivity and corporate correctness... There is no one perfect way. Britannica seems to claim that there is. Misplaced Pages acknowledges there's no such thing. Librarians and information professionals have always known this. That's why we always consult multiple sources and counsel our users to do the same.

Jonathan Sidener of The San Diego Union-Tribune wrote that "vandalism and self-serving misinformation common particularly in the political articles".

Andrew Orlowski, a columnist for The Register, expressed similar criticisms in 2005, writing that the use of the term "encyclopedia" to describe Misplaced Pages may lead users into believing it is more reliable than it may be.

BBC technology specialist Bill Thompson wrote that "Most Misplaced Pages entries are written and submitted in good faith, and we should not let the contentious areas such as politics, religion or biography shape our view of the project as a whole", that it forms a good starting point for serious research but that:

No information source is guaranteed to be accurate, and we should not place complete faith in something which can so easily be undermined through malice or ignorance... That does not devalue the project entirely, it just means that we should be skeptical about Misplaced Pages entries as a primary source of information... It is the same with search engine results. Just because something comes up in the top 10 on MSN Search or Google does not automatically give it credibility or vouch for its accuracy or importance.

Thompson adds the observation that since most popular online sources are inherently unreliable in this way, one byproduct of the information age is a wiser audience who are learning to check information rather than take it on faith due to its source, leading to "a better sense of how to evaluate information sources".

The Supreme Court of India in its judgment in Commr. of Customs, Bangalore vs. ACER India Pvt. (Citation 2007(12)SCALE581) has held that "We have referred to Misplaced Pages, as the learned Counsel for the parties relied thereupon. It is an online encyclopaedia and information can be entered therein by any person and as such it may not be authentic."

In his 2007 Guide to Military History on the Internet, Simon Fowler rated Misplaced Pages as "the best general resource" for military history research, and stated that "the results are largely accurate and generally free of bias". When rating Misplaced Pages as the No. 1 military site he mentioned that "Misplaced Pages is often criticised for its inaccuracy and bias, but in my experience the military history articles are spot on."

In July 2008, The Economist magazine described Misplaced Pages as "a user-generated reference service" and noted that Misplaced Pages's "elaborate moderation rules put a limit to acrimony" generated by cyber-nationalism.

Jimmy Wales, a co-founder of Misplaced Pages, stresses that encyclopedias of any type are not usually appropriate as primary sources, and should not be relied upon as being authoritative.

Carnegie Mellon Professor Randy Pausch offered the following anecdote in his book The Last Lecture. He was surprised that his entry to World Book Encyclopedia on virtual reality was accepted without question, so he concluded, "I now believe Misplaced Pages is a perfectly fine source for your information, because I know what the quality control is for real encyclopedias."

Removal of false information

Fernanda Viégas of the MIT Media Lab and Martin Wattenberg and Kushal Dave of IBM Research studied the flow of editing in the Misplaced Pages model, with emphasis on breaks in flow (from vandalism or substantial rewrites), showing the dynamic flow of material over time. From a sample of vandalism edits on the English Misplaced Pages during May 2003, they found that most such acts were repaired within minutes, summarizing:

We've examined many pages on Misplaced Pages that treat controversial topics, and have discovered that most have, in fact, been vandalized at some point in their history. But we've also found that vandalism is usually repaired extremely quickly—so quickly that most users will never see its effects.

They also stated that "it is essentially impossible to find a crisp definition of vandalism".

Lih (2004) compared articles before and after they were mentioned in the press, and found that externally referenced articles are of higher quality work.

An informal assessment by the popular IT magazine PC Pro for its 2007 article "Misplaced Pages Uncovered" tested Misplaced Pages by introducing 10 errors that "varied between bleeding obvious and deftly subtle" into articles (the researchers later corrected the articles they had edited). Labeling the results "impressive" it noted that all but one was noted and fixed within the hour, and that "the Wikipedians' tools and know-how were just too much for our team." A second series of another 10 tests, using "far more subtle errors" and additional techniques to conceal their nature, met similar results: "despite our stealth attempts the vast majority... were discovered remarkably quickly... the ridiculously minor Jesse James error was corrected within a minute and a very slight change to Queen Anne's entry was put right within two minutes". Two of the latter series were not detected. The article concluded that "Misplaced Pages corrects the vast majority of errors within minutes, but if they're not spotted within the first day the chances... dwindle as you're then relying on someone to spot the errors while reading the article rather than reviewing the edits".

A study in late 2007 systematically inserted inaccuracies into Misplaced Pages entries about the lives of philosophers. Depending on how exactly the data are interpreted, either one third or one half of the inaccuracies were corrected within 48 hours.

A 2007 peer-reviewed study that measured the actual number of page views with "damaged" content concluded:

42% of damage is repaired almost immediately, i.e., before it can confuse, offend, or mislead anyone. Nonetheless, there are still hundreds of millions of damaged views.

Loc Vu-Quoc, professor for Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of Florida, stated in 2008 that "sometimes errors may go for years without being corrected as experts don't usually read Misplaced Pages articles in their own field to correct these errors".

Susceptibility to bias

Individual bias and the WikiScanner tool

Main article: WikiScanner

In August 2007, WikiScanner, a tool developed by Virgil Griffith of the California Institute of Technology, was released to match anonymous IP edits in the encyclopedia with an extensive database of addresses. News stories appeared about IP addresses from various organizations such as the Central Intelligence Agency, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Diebold, Inc. and the Australian government being used to make edits to Misplaced Pages articles, sometimes of an opinionated or questionable nature. The BBC quoted a Wikimedia spokesperson as praising the tool: "We really value transparency and the scanner really takes this to another level. Misplaced Pages Scanner may prevent an organization or individuals from editing articles that they're really not supposed to."

The WikiScanner story was also covered by The Independent, which stated that many "censorial interventions" by editors with vested interests on a variety of articles in Misplaced Pages had been discovered:

was hailed as a breakthrough in the democratisation of knowledge. But the online encyclopedia has since been hijacked by forces who decided that certain things were best left unknown... Now a website designed to monitor editorial changes made on Misplaced Pages has found thousands of self-serving edits and traced them to their original source. It has turned out to be hugely embarrassing for armies of political spin doctors and corporate revisionists who believed their censorial interventions had gone unnoticed.

Not everyone hailed WikiScanner as a success for Misplaced Pages. Oliver Kamm, in a column for The Times, argued instead that:

The WikiScanner is thus an important development in bringing down a pernicious influence on our intellectual life. Critics of the web decry the medium as the cult of the amateur. Misplaced Pages is worse than that; it is the province of the covert lobby. The most constructive course is to stand on the sidelines and jeer at its pretensions.

WikiScanner only reveals conflict of interest when the editor does not have a Misplaced Pages account and their IP address is used instead. Conflict of interest editing done by editors with accounts is not detected, since those edits are anonymous to everyone—except for a handful of privileged Misplaced Pages admins.

Coverage

See also: Criticism of Misplaced Pages § Systemic bias in coverage, and Academic studies about Misplaced Pages § A minority of editors produce the majority of persistent content

Misplaced Pages has been accused of systemic bias, which is to say its general nature leads, without necessarily any conscious intention, to the propagation of various prejudices. Although many articles in newspapers have concentrated on minor, indeed trivial, factual errors in Misplaced Pages articles, there are also concerns about large-scale, presumably unintentional effects from the increasing influence and use of Misplaced Pages as a research tool at all levels. In an article in the Times Higher Education magazine (London) philosopher Martin Cohen frames Misplaced Pages of having "become a monopoly" with "all the prejudices and ignorance of its creators", which he describes as a "youthful cab-drivers" perspective. Cohen's argument, however, finds a grave conclusion in these circumstances: "To control the reference sources that people use is to control the way people comprehend the world. Misplaced Pages may have a benign, even trivial face, but underneath may lie a more sinister and subtle threat to freedom of thought." That freedom is undermined by what he sees as what matters on Misplaced Pages, "not your sources but the 'support of the community'."

Critics also point to the tendency to cover topics in a detail disproportionate to their importance. For example, Stephen Colbert once mockingly praised Misplaced Pages for having a "longer entry on 'lightsabers' than it does on the 'printing press'." In an interview with The Guardian, Dale Hoiberg, the editor-in-chief of Encyclopædia Britannica, noted:

People write of things they're interested in, and so many subjects don't get covered; and news events get covered in great detail. In the past, the entry on Hurricane Frances was more than five times the length of that on Chinese art, and the entry on Coronation Street was twice as long as the article on Tony Blair.

This critical approach has been satirised as "Wikigroaning", a term coined by Jon Hendren of the website Something Awful. In the game, two articles (preferably with similar names) are compared: one about an acknowledged serious or classical subject and the other about a popular topic or current event. Defenders of a broad inclusion criteria have held that the encyclopedia's coverage of pop culture does not impose space constraints on the coverage of more serious subjects (see "Wiki is not paper"). As Ivor Tossell noted:

That Misplaced Pages is chock full of useless arcana (and did you know, by the way, that the article on "Debate" is shorter than the piece that weighs the relative merits of the 1978 and 2003 versions of Battlestar Galactica?) isn't a knock against it: Since it can grow infinitely, the silly articles aren't depriving the serious ones of space.

Misplaced Pages has been accused of deficiencies in comprehensiveness because of its voluntary nature, and of reflecting the systemic biases of its contributors. Former Nupedia editor-in-chief Larry Sanger stated in 2004, "when it comes to relatively specialized topics (outside of the interests of most of the contributors), the project's credibility is very uneven." In a GamesRadar editorial, columnist Charlie Barrat juxtaposed Misplaced Pages's coverage of video game-related topics with its smaller content about topics that have greater real-world significance, such as God, World War II and former U.S. presidents.

Misplaced Pages has been praised for making it possible for articles to be updated or created in response to current events. Its editors have also argued that, as a website, Misplaced Pages is able to include articles on a greater number of subjects than print encyclopedias can.

A 2011 study reported evidence of cultural bias in Misplaced Pages articles about famous people on both the English and Polish Wikipedias. These biases included those pertaining to the cultures of both the United States and Poland on each of the corresponding-language Wikipedias, as well as a pro-U.S./English-language bias on both of them.

Notability of article topics
This section is transcluded from Criticism of Misplaced Pages. (edit | history) See also: Notability in the English Misplaced Pages and Criticism of Misplaced Pages § Systemic bias in coverage

Misplaced Pages's notability guidelines, which are used by editors to determine if a subject merits its own article, and the application thereof, are the subject of much criticism. In May 2018, a Misplaced Pages editor rejected a draft article about Donna Strickland before she won the Nobel Prize in Physics in November of the same year, because no independent sources were given to show that Strickland was sufficiently notable by Misplaced Pages's standards. Journalists highlighted this as an indicator of the limited visibility of women in science compared to their male colleagues.

The gender bias on Misplaced Pages is well documented and has prompted a movement to increase the number of notable women on Misplaced Pages through the Women in Red WikiProject. In an article entitled "Seeking Disambiguation", Annalisa Merelli interviewed Catalina Cruz, a candidate for office in Queens, New York in the 2018 election who had the notorious SEO disadvantage of having the same name as a porn star with a Misplaced Pages page. Merelli also interviewed the Misplaced Pages editor who wrote the candidate's ill-fated article (which was deleted, then restored, after she won the election). She described the Articles for Deletion process and pointed to other candidates who had pages on the English Misplaced Pages despite never having held office.

Novelist Nicholson Baker, critical of deletionism, writes: "There are quires, reams, bales of controversy over what constitutes notability in Misplaced Pages: nobody will ever sort it out."

Journalist Timothy Noah wrote of his treatment: "Misplaced Pages's notability policy resembles U.S. immigration policy before 9/11: stringent rules, spotty enforcement". In the same article, Noah mentions that the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Stacy Schiff was not considered notable enough for a Misplaced Pages entry until she wrote her article "Know it All" about the Misplaced Pages Essjay controversy.

On a more generic level, a 2014 study found no correlation between the characteristics of a given Misplaced Pages page about an academic and the academic's notability as determined by citation counts. The metrics of each Misplaced Pages page examined included length, number of links to the page from other articles, and number of edits made to the page. This study also found that Misplaced Pages did not cover notable ISI highly cited researchers properly.

In 2020, Misplaced Pages was criticized for the amount of time it took for an article about Theresa Greenfield, a candidate for the 2020 United States Senate election in Iowa, to leave Misplaced Pages's Articles for Creation process and become published. Particularly, the criteria for notability were criticized, with The Washington Post reporting: "Greenfield is a uniquely tricky case for Misplaced Pages because she doesn't have the background that most candidates for major political office typically have (like prior government experience or prominence in business). Even if Misplaced Pages editors could recognize she was prominent, she had a hard time meeting the official criteria for notability." Jimmy Wales also criticized the long process on his talk page.

Liberal bias
Main article: Ideological bias on Misplaced Pages

According to Jimmy Wales: "The Misplaced Pages community is very diverse, from liberal to conservative to libertarian and beyond. If averages mattered, and due to the nature of the wiki software (no voting) they almost certainly don't, I would say that the Misplaced Pages community is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population on average, because we are global and the international community of English speakers is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population. There are no data or surveys to back that." A number of politically conservative commentators have argued that Misplaced Pages's coverage is affected by liberal bias. Andrew Schlafly created Conservapedia because he found Misplaced Pages "increasingly anti-Christian and anti-American" for its frequent use of British spelling and coverage of topics like creationism and the effect of Christianity on the Renaissance. In 2007, an article in The Christian Post criticised Misplaced Pages's coverage of intelligent design, saying that it was biased and hypocritical. Lawrence Solomon of the National Review stated that Misplaced Pages articles on subjects like global warming, intelligent design, and Roe v. Wade are slanted in favor of liberal views.

In a September 2010 issue of the conservative weekly Human Events, Rowan Scarborough presented a critique of Misplaced Pages's coverage of American politicians prominent in the approaching midterm elections as evidence of systemic liberal bias. Scarborough compared the biographical articles of liberal and conservative opponents in Senate races in the Alaska Republican primary and the Delaware and Nevada general election, emphasizing the quantity of negative coverage of tea party-endorsed candidates. He also cites some criticism by Lawrence Solomon and quotes in full the lead section of Misplaced Pages's article on the conservative wiki Conservapedia as evidence of an underlying bias.

American and corporate media bias

Tim Anderson, a senior lecturer in political economy at the University of Sydney, said that Misplaced Pages administrators display a U.S.-oriented bias in their interaction with editors, and in their determination of sources that are appropriate for use on the site. Anderson was outraged after several of the sources he used in his edits to Hugo Chávez, including Venezuela Analysis and Z Magazine, were disallowed as "unusable". Anderson also described Misplaced Pages's neutral point of view policy to ZDNet Australia as "a facade", and that Misplaced Pages "hides behind a reliance on corporate media editorials".

A 2015 study found negative facts are more likely to be removed from Misplaced Pages articles on U.S. senators than positive facts.

Reliability as a source in other contexts

Although Misplaced Pages is stated not to be a primary source, it has been used as evidence in legal cases. In January 2007, The New York Times reported that U.S. courts vary in their treatment of Misplaced Pages as a source of information, with over 100 judicial rulings having relied on the encyclopedia, including those involving taxes, narcotics, and civil issues such as personal injury and matrimonial issues.

In April 2012, The Wall Street Journal reported that in the five years since the 2007 New York Times story, federal courts of appeals had cited Misplaced Pages about 95 times. The story also reported that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit vacated convictions in a cockfighting case because a juror used Misplaced Pages to research an element of the crime, expressing in its decision concerns about Misplaced Pages's reliability.

In one notable case, the trademark of Formula One racing decision, the UK Intellectual Property Office considered both the reliability of Misplaced Pages, and its usefulness as a reliable source of evidence:

Misplaced Pages has sometimes suffered from the self-editing that is intrinsic to it, giving rise at times to potentially libellous statements. However, inherently, I cannot see that what is in Misplaced Pages is any less likely to be true than what is published in a book or on the websites of news organizations. did not express any concerns about the Misplaced Pages evidence . I consider that the evidence from Misplaced Pages can be taken at face value." The case turned substantively upon evidence cited from Misplaced Pages in 2006 as to the usage and interpretation of the term Formula One.

In the United States, the United States Court of Federal Claims has ruled that "Misplaced Pages may not be a reliable source of information." and "...Articles do not—at least on their face—remotely meet this reliability requirement...A review of the Misplaced Pages website reveals a pervasive and, for our purposes, disturbing series of disclaimers...". Such disclaimers include the Misplaced Pages not being able to guarantee the validity of the information on its articles and having no formal peer review.

Among other reasons for these statements about Misplaced Pages's reliability are the stability of the articles (which due to editing may cause new readers to find information that differs from the originally cited) and, according to Stephen Gillers, a professor at New York University Law School, "the most critical fact is public acceptance", therefore "a judge should not use Misplaced Pages when the public is not prepared to accept it as authority".

Misplaced Pages has also become a key source for some current news events such as the 2007 Virginia Tech massacre, when The New York Times cites Wikimedia to report 750,000 page views of the article in the two days after the event:

Even The Roanoke Times, which is published near Blacksburg, Virginia, where the university is located, noted on Thursday that Misplaced Pages "has emerged as the clearinghouse for detailed information on the event".

The Washington Post commented, in the context of 2008 Presidential election candidate biographies, that despite occasional brief vandalism, "it's hard to find a more up-to-date, detailed, thorough article on Obama than Misplaced Pages's. As of Friday (14 September 2007), Obama's article—more than 22 pages long, with 15 sections covering his personal and professional life—had a reference list of 167 sources."

Broad opinions

Several commentators have drawn a middle ground, asserting that the project contains much valuable knowledge and has some reliability, even if the degree is not yet assessed with certainty.

Others taking this view include danah boyd, who in 2005 discussed Misplaced Pages as an academic source, concluding that "t will never be an encyclopedia, but it will contain extensive knowledge that is quite valuable for different purposes", and Bill Thompson who stated "I use the Misplaced Pages a lot. It is a good starting point for serious research, but I would never accept something that I read there without checking."

Information Today's March 2006 article concludes on a similar theme:

The inconvenient reality is that people and their products are messy, whether produced in a top-down or bottom-up manner. Almost every source includes errors... Many non-fiction books are produced via an appallingly sloppy process... In this author's opinion, the flap over Misplaced Pages was significantly overblown, but contained a silver lining: People are becoming more aware of the perils of accepting information at face value. They have learned not to consult just one source.

Dan Gillmor, a Silicon Valley commentator and author commented in October 2004 that, "I don't think anyone is saying Misplaced Pages is an absolute replacement for a traditional encyclopedia. But in the topics I know something about, I've found Misplaced Pages to be as accurate as any other source I've found."

Larry Sanger stated on Kuro5hin in 2001 that "Given enough eyeballs, all errors are shallow", which is a paraphrase of Linus' Law of open-source development.

Likewise, technology figure Joi Ito wrote on Misplaced Pages's authority, "lthough it depends a bit on the field, the question is whether something is more likely to be true coming from a source whose resume sounds authoritative, or a source that has been viewed by hundreds of thousands of people (with the ability to comment) and has survived."

In a 2008 letter to the editor of Physics Today, Gregg Jaeger, an associate professor at Boston University, has characterized Misplaced Pages as a medium that is susceptible to fostering "anarchy and distortions" in relation to scientific information. The letter was in response to a review of his book Quantum Information: An Overview, that had questioned "whether there is an audience for such encyclopedic texts, especially given the easy access to online sources of information such as the arXiv e-print server and Misplaced Pages."

People known to use or recommend Misplaced Pages as a reference source include film critic Roger Ebert, comedian Rosie O'Donnell, University of Maryland physicist Robert L. Park, Rutgers University sociology professor Ted Goertzel and scientific skepticism promoter and investigator James Randi. Periodicals that publish articles featuring citations of Misplaced Pages as a source include the American science magazines Skeptic and Skeptical Inquirer. In the January 2013 episode of his talk show, Stossel, about how ideas can flourish without regulation, journalist John Stossel interviewed Misplaced Pages co-founder Jimmy Wales, and discussed the success of Misplaced Pages's model versus that of Britannica, during which Stossel stated that his own Misplaced Pages article exhibited only one error.

Jean Goodwin wrote on the reasons why Misplaced Pages may be trusted. According to him, while readers may not assess the actual expertise of the authors of a given article, they may assess the passion of Wikipedians, and in so far provide a reason for trust.

Tools for testing the reliability of articles

Screenshot of Wiki-Watch rating of the article Reliability of Misplaced Pages rated as reliable source and additional orange WikiTrust marks for questionable edits

While experienced editors can view the article history and discussion page, for normal users it is not so easy to check whether information from Misplaced Pages is reliable. University projects from California, Switzerland and Germany try to improve that by methods of formal analysis and data mining. Wiki-Watch from Germany, which was inspired by the WikiBu from Switzerland, shows an evaluation up to five-stars for every English or German article in Misplaced Pages. Part of this rating is the tool WikiTrust which shows the trustworthiness of single text parts of Misplaced Pages articles by white (trustworthy) or orange (not trustworthy) markings.

Notable incidents

See also: List of Misplaced Pages controversies

False biographical information

Cached version of a deleted biographical hoax in the French Misplaced Pages. Created in January 2007, the article on the fictional 18th century naturalist Léon Robert de L'Astran was not deleted until June 2010, when a historian identified it as a hoax.

Inaccurate information may persist in Misplaced Pages for a long time before it is challenged. The most prominent cases reported by mainstream media involved biographies of living persons.

The Seigenthaler incident demonstrated that the subject of a biographical article must sometimes fix blatant lies about his or her own life. In May 2005, a user edited the biographical article on John Seigenthaler Sr. so that it contained several false and defamatory statements. The inaccurate claims went unnoticed between May and September 2005 when they were discovered by Victor S. Johnson, Jr., a friend of Seigenthaler. Misplaced Pages content is often mirrored at sites such as Answers.com, which means that incorrect information can be replicated alongside correct information through a number of web sources. Such information can develop a misleading air of authority because of its presence at such sites:

Then son discovered that his father's hoax biography also appeared on two other sites, Reference.com and Answers.com, which took direct feeds from Misplaced Pages. It was out there for four months before Seigenthaler realized and got the Misplaced Pages entry replaced with a more reliable account. The lies remained for another three weeks on the mirror sites downstream.

Seth Finkelstein reported in an article in The Guardian on his efforts to remove his own biography page from Misplaced Pages, simply because it was subjected to defamation:

Misplaced Pages has a short biography of me, originally added in February 2004, mostly concerned with my internet civil liberties achievements. After discovering in May 2006 that it had been vandalised in March, possibly by a long-time opponent, and that the attack had been subsequently propagated to many other sites which (legally) repackage Misplaced Pages's content, the article's existence seemed to me overall to be harmful rather than helpful. For people who are not very prominent, Misplaced Pages biographies can be an "attractive nuisance". It says, to every troll, vandal, and score-settler: "Here's an article about a person where you can, with no accountability whatsoever, write any libel, defamation, or smear. It won't be a marginal comment with the social status of an inconsequential rant, but rather will be made prominent about the person, and reputation-laundered with the institutional status of an encyclopedia."

In the same article Finkelstein recounts how he voted his own biography as "not notable enough" in order to have it removed from Misplaced Pages. He goes on to recount a similar story involving Angela Beesley, previously a prominent member of the foundation which runs Misplaced Pages.

In November 2005, the biography of Jens Stoltenberg, the Norwegian Prime Minister, was edited to contain libelous statements.

Taner Akçam, a Turkish history professor at the University of Minnesota, was detained at the Montreal airport, as his article was vandalized by Turkish nationalists in 2007. While this mistake was resolved, he was again arrested in US for the same suspicion two days later.

In another example, on March 2, 2007, msnbc.com reported that Hillary Clinton had been incorrectly listed for 20 months in her Misplaced Pages biography as valedictorian of her class of 1969 at Wellesley College. (Hillary Rodham was not the valedictorian, though she did speak at commencement.) The article included a link to the Misplaced Pages edit, where the incorrect information was added on July 9, 2005. After the msnbc.com report, the inaccurate information was removed the same day. Between the two edits, the wrong information had stayed in the Clinton article while it was edited more than 4,800 times over 20 months.

Attempts to perpetrate hoaxes may not be confined to editing Misplaced Pages articles. In October 2005 Alan Mcilwraith, a former call center worker from Scotland created a Misplaced Pages article in which he claimed to be a highly decorated war hero. The article was quickly identified by other users as unreliable (see Misplaced Pages Signpost article 17 April 2006). However, Mcilwraith had also succeeded in convincing a number of charities and media organizations that he was who he claimed to be:

The 28-year-old, who calls himself Captain Sir Alan McIlwraith, KBE, DSO, MC, has mixed with celebrities for at least one fundraising event. But last night, an Army spokesman said: "I can confirm he is a fraud. He has never been an officer, soldier or Army cadet."

In May 2010, French politician Ségolène Royal publicly praised the memory of Léon-Robert de l'Astran, an 18th-century naturalist, humanist and son of a slave trader, who had opposed the slave trade. The newspaper Sud-Ouest revealed a month later that de l'Astran had never existed—except as the subject of an article in the French Misplaced Pages. Historian Jean-Louis Mahé discovered that de l'Astran was fictional after a student, interested by Royal's praise of him, asked Mahé about him. Mahé's research led him to realize that de l'Astran did not exist in any archives, and he traced the hoax back to the Rotary Club of La Rochelle. The article, created by members of the Club in January 2007, had thus remained online for three years—unsourced—before the hoax was uncovered. Upon Sud-Ouest's revelation—repeated in other major French newspapers—French Misplaced Pages administrator DonCamillo immediately deleted the article.

There have also been instances of users deliberately inserting false information into Misplaced Pages in order to test the system and demonstrate its alleged unreliability. For example, Gene Weingarten, a journalist, ran such a test in 2007 by anonymously inserting false information into his own biography. The fabrications were removed 27 hours later by a Misplaced Pages editor who was regularly watching changes to that article. Television personality Stephen Colbert lampooned this drawback of Misplaced Pages, calling it wikiality.

"Death by Misplaced Pages" is a phenomenon in which a person is erroneously proclaimed dead through vandalism. Articles about the comedian Paul Reiser, British television host Vernon Kay, and the West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd, who died on June 28, 2010, have been vandalized in this way.

Misplaced Pages considers vandalism as "any addition, removal, or change of content in a deliberate attempt to compromise the integrity of Misplaced Pages". The Misplaced Pages page "Researching with Misplaced Pages" states:

Misplaced Pages's radical openness means that any given article may be, at any given moment, in a bad state: for example, it could be in the middle of a large edit or it could have been recently vandalized. While blatant vandalism is usually easily spotted and rapidly corrected, Misplaced Pages is certainly more subject to subtle vandalism than a typical reference work.

Other false information

In June 2007, an anonymous Misplaced Pages contributor became involved in the Chris Benoit double murder and suicide because of an unverified piece of information he added to the Chris Benoit English Misplaced Pages article. This information regarding Benoit's wife's death was added fourteen hours before police discovered the bodies of Benoit and his family. Police detectives seized computer equipment from the man held responsible for the postings, but believed he was uninvolved and did not press charges.

The IP address from which the edit was made was traced to earlier instances of Misplaced Pages vandalism. The contributor apologized on Wikinews, saying:

I will never vandalize anything on Misplaced Pages or post wrongful information. I will never post anything here again unless it is pure fact ...

On 29 August 2008, shortly after the first round draw was completed for UEFA Europa League football cup, an edit was made to the article for the football club AC Omonia, apparently by users of the website B3ta, which added the following erroneous information to the section titled "The fans".

A small but loyal group of fans are lovingly called "The Zany Ones"—they like to wear hats made from discarded shoes and have a song about a little potato.

On 18 September 2008, David Anderson, a British journalist writing for the Daily Mirror, quoted this in his match preview ahead of Omonia's game with Manchester City, which appeared in the web and print versions of the Mirror and the nickname was quoted in subsequent editions on 19 September.

In a 2009 incident, University College Dublin sociology student Shane Fitzgerald added an incorrect quote to the article on the recently deceased composer Maurice Jarre. Fitzgerald wanted to demonstrate the potential dangers of news reporters' reliance on the internet for information. Although Fitzgerald's edits were removed three times from the Misplaced Pages article for lack of sourcing, they were nevertheless copied into obituary columns in newspapers worldwide. Fitzgerald believes that if he had not come forward his quote would have remained in history as fact.

The death of Norman Wisdom in October 2010 led several major newspapers to repeat the false claim, drawn from Misplaced Pages, that he was the author of the lyrics of the Second World War song "(There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover".

After the 2010 FIFA World Cup, FIFA president Sepp Blatter was presented with the Order of the Companions of Oliver Reginald Tambo. The citation, however, read: "The Order of the Companions of OR Tambo in Gold—awarded to Joseph Sepp Bellend Blatter (1936–) for his exceptional contribution to the field of football and support for the hosting of the Fifa World Cup on the African continent," after the name on his Misplaced Pages entry was vandalized.

In October 2012 the Asian Football Confederation official website published an article about the United Arab Emirates national football team's bid to qualify for the 2015 AFC Asian Cup, in which the team's nickname was stated to be the "Sand Monkeys". This was the indirect result of vandalism of the Misplaced Pages article on the team, and the AFC was forced to apologise for what was perceived as a racist slur.

The Misplaced Pages hoax "Bicholim conflict" which in 2007 won the status of "Good Article."

In December 2012, an article titled "Bicholim conflict" was deleted after standing since 2007. It talked about a war that took place in India between the years 1640 and 1641, but was later confirmed to be completely fictitious. The hoax article had won Misplaced Pages's "Good Article" award, a status conferred on fewer than 1 percent of articles on the site, a few months after its creation in 2007, and held that status for five years.

In March 2013, it was discovered that both Misplaced Pages and IMDB had for three-and-a-half years contained articles on a fictitious Russian filmmaker named Yuri Gadyukin. False information had been planted in both sites as part of a viral promotion campaign for an upcoming film.

In May 2014, The New Yorker reported that a 17-year-old student had added an invented nickname to the Misplaced Pages article on the coati in 2008, saying coatis were also known as "Brazilian aardvarks". The taxonomically false information, inserted as a private joke, lasted for six years in Misplaced Pages and over this time came to be propagated by hundreds of websites, several newspapers (one of which was later cited as a source in Misplaced Pages) and even books published by university presses. It was only removed from Misplaced Pages after publication of the New Yorker article, in which the student explained how the joke had come about.

In March 2015, it became known that an article on Misplaced Pages entitled "Jar'Edo Wens", purportedly about an Australian aboriginal deity of that name, was a hoax. The article had survived for more than nine years before being deleted, making it one of the longest-lived documented hoax articles in Misplaced Pages's history. The article spawned mentions of the fake god on numerous other websites as well as in an academic book titled Atheism and the Case Against Christ.

Conflict-of-interest editing on Misplaced Pages

Main article: Conflict-of-interest editing on Misplaced Pages

Political interests and advocacy

While Misplaced Pages policy requires articles to have a neutral point of view, there have been attempts to place a spin on articles. In January 2006 several staffers of members of the U.S. House of Representatives attempted to cleanse their respective bosses' biographies on Misplaced Pages, and to insert negative remarks on political opponents. References to a campaign promise by Martin Meehan to surrender his seat in 2000 were deleted, and negative comments were inserted into the articles on U.S. Senator Bill Frist and Eric Cantor, a congressman from Virginia. Numerous other changes were made from an IP address which is assigned to the House of Representatives. In an interview, Jimmy Wales remarked that the changes were "not cool."

On August 31, 2008, The New York Times ran an article detailing the edits made to the biography of Sarah Palin in the wake of her nomination as running mate of John McCain. During the 24 hours before the McCain campaign announcement, 30 edits, many of them flattering details, were made to the article by Misplaced Pages single-purpose user identity Young Trigg. This person later acknowledged working on the McCain campaign, and having several Misplaced Pages user accounts.

Larry Delay and Pablo Bachelet write that from their perspective, some articles dealing with Latin American history and groups (such as the Sandinistas and Cuba) lack political neutrality and are written from a sympathetic Marxist perspective which treats socialist dictatorships favorably at the expense of alternate positions.

In November 2007, libelous accusations were made against two politicians from southwestern France, Jean-Pierre Grand and Hélène Mandroux-Colas, on their Misplaced Pages biographies. Jean-Pierre Grand asked the president of the French National Assembly and the Prime Minister of France to reinforce the legislation on the penal responsibility of Internet sites and of authors who peddle false information in order to cause harm. Senator Jean Louis Masson then requested the Minister of Justice to tell him whether it would be possible to increase the criminal responsibilities of hosting providers, site operators, and authors of libelous content; the minister declined to do so, recalling the existing rules in the LCEN law.

In 2009, Misplaced Pages banned the Church of Scientology from editing any articles on its site. The Misplaced Pages articles concerning Scientology were edited by members of the group to improve its portrayal.

On August 25, 2010, the Toronto Star reported that the Canadian "government is now conducting two investigations into federal employees who have taken to Misplaced Pages to express their opinion on federal policies and bitter political debates."

In 2010, Al Jazeera's Teymoor Nabili suggested that the article Cyrus Cylinder had been edited for political purposes by "an apparent tussle of opinions in the shadowy world of hard drives and 'independent' editors that comprise the Misplaced Pages industry." He suggested that after the Iranian presidential election, 2009 and the ensuing "anti-Iranian activities" a "strenuous attempt to portray the cylinder as nothing more than the propaganda tool of an aggressive invader" was visible. The edits following his analysis of the edits during 2009 and 2010, represented "a complete dismissal of the suggestion that the cylinder, or Cyrus' actions, represent concern for human rights or any kind of enlightened intent," in stark contrast to Cyrus' own reputation (among the people of Babylon) as written in the Old Testament.

Arab-Israeli conflict

In April 2008, the Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) organized an e-mail campaign to encourage readers to correct perceived Israel-related biases and inconsistencies in Misplaced Pages. Excerpts of some of the e-mails were published in the July 2008 issue of Harper's Magazine under the title of "Candid camera".

CAMERA argued the excerpts were unrepresentative and that it had explicitly campaigned merely "toward encouraging people to learn about and edit the online encyclopedia for accuracy". According to some defenders of CAMERA, serious misrepresentations of CAMERA's role emanated from the competing Electronic Intifada group; moreover, it is said, some other Palestinian advocacy groups have been guilty of systematic misrepresentations and manipulative behaviors but have not suffered bans of editors amongst their staff or volunteers.

Five editors involved in the campaign were sanctioned by Misplaced Pages administrators. Israeli diplomat David Saranga said that Misplaced Pages is generally fair in regard to Israel. When confronted with the fact that the entry on Israel mentioned the word "occupation" nine times, whereas the entry on the Palestinian People mentioned "terror" only once, he replied

"It means only one thing: Israelis should be more active on Misplaced Pages. Instead of blaming it, they should go on the site much more, and try and change it."

Political commentator Haviv Rettig Gur, reviewing widespread perceptions in Israel of systemic bias in Misplaced Pages articles, has argued that there are deeper structural problems creating this bias: anonymous editing favors biased results, especially if those Gur calls "pro-Palestinian activists" organize concerted campaigns as has been done in articles dealing with Arab-Israeli issues, and current Misplaced Pages policies, while well-meant, have proven ineffective in handling this.

On 3 August 2010, it was reported that the Yesha Council together with Israel Sheli (My Israel), a network of online pro-Israel activists committed to spreading Zionism online, were organizing people at a workshop in Jerusalem to teach them how to edit Misplaced Pages articles in a pro-Israeli way. Around 50 people took part in the course.

The project organiser, Ayelet Shaked, who has since been elected to Israel's parliament, was interviewed on Arutz Sheva Radio. She emphasized that the information has to be reliable and meet Misplaced Pages rules. She cited some examples such as the use of the term "occupation" in Misplaced Pages entries, as well as in the editing of entries that link Israel with Judea and Samaria and Jewish history".

"We don't want to change Misplaced Pages or turn it into a propaganda arm," commented Naftali Bennett, director of the Yesha Council. "We just want to show the other side. People think that Israelis are mean, evil people who only want to hurt Arabs all day." "The idea is not to make Misplaced Pages rightist but for it to include our point of view," he said in another interview.

A course participant explained that the course is not a "Zionist conspiracy to take over Misplaced Pages"; rather, it is an attempt to balance information about disputed issues presented in the online encyclopedia.

he goal of this workshop was to train a number of pro-Israelis how to edit Misplaced Pages so that more people could present the Israeli side of things, and thus the content would be more balanced... Misplaced Pages is meant to be a fair and balanced source, and it is that way by having people from all across the spectrum contributing to the content.

Following the course announcement, Abdul Nasser An-Najar, the head of Palestinian Journalists Syndicate said there were plans to set up a counter group to ensure the Palestinian view is presented online as the "next regional war will be media war."

In 2011, Misplaced Pages founder Jimmy Wales stated in retrospect about the course organized by Israel Sheli, "we saw absolutely no impact from that effort whatsoever. I don't think it ever—it was in the press but we never saw any impact."

Corporate public relations industry

In January, 2012, members of the public relations industry created the Corporate Representatives for Ethical Misplaced Pages Engagement (CREWE) Facebook group with the stated goal of maintaining accurate articles about corporations.

Editing for financial rewards

In an October 2012 Salon story, Misplaced Pages co-founder Jimmy Wales stated that he was against the practice of paid editing of Misplaced Pages, as are a number long-time members of Misplaced Pages's community. Nonetheless, a number of organizations do pay employees to edit Misplaced Pages articles, with one writer, Soraya Field Fiorio, stating that she writes commissioned Misplaced Pages articles for writers and musicians for $30 an hour. According to Fiorio, her clients control the article's content in the same way that they control press releases, which function as part of publicity strategies. In January 2007, Rick Jelliffe claimed in a story carried by CBS and IDG News Service that Microsoft had offered him compensation in exchange for his future editorial services on OOXML. A Microsoft spokesperson, quoted by CBS, commented that "Microsoft and the writer, Rick Jelliffe, had not determined a price and no money had changed hands, but they had agreed that the company would not be allowed to review his writing before submission". CBS also quoted Jimmy Wales as having expressed his disapproval of Microsoft's involvement: "We were very disappointed to hear that Microsoft was taking that approach."

In a story covered by the BBC, Jeffrey Merkey claimed that in exchange for a donation his Misplaced Pages entry was edited in his favor. Jay Walsh, a spokesman for Misplaced Pages, flatly denied the allegations in an interview given to the Daily Telegraph.

In a story covered by InformationWeek, Eric Goldman, assistant law professor at Santa Clara University in California argued that "eventually, marketers will build scripts to edit Misplaced Pages pages to insert links and conduct automated attacks on Misplaced Pages", thus putting the encyclopedia beyond the ability of its editors to provide countermeasures against the attackers, particularly because of a vicious circle where the strain of responding to these attacks drives core contributors away, increasing the strain on those who remain. However, Misplaced Pages operates bots to aid in the detection and removal of vandalism, and uses nofollow and a CAPTCHA to discourage and filter additions of external links.

Conflicts involving Misplaced Pages policy makers

In February 2008, British technology news and opinion website The Register stated that a prominent administrator of Misplaced Pages had edited a topic area where he had a conflict of interest to keep criticism to a bare minimum, as well as altering the Misplaced Pages policies regarding personal biography and conflict of interest to favour his editing.

Some of the most scathing criticism of Misplaced Pages's claimed neutrality came in The Register, which in turn was allegedly criticized by founding members of the project. According to The Register:

In short, Misplaced Pages is a cult. Or at least, the inner circle is a cult. We aren't the first to make this observation.

On the inside, they reinforce each other's beliefs. And if anyone on the outside questions those beliefs, they circle the wagons. They deny the facts. They attack the attacker. After our Jossi Fresco story, Fresco didn't refute our reporting. He simply accused us of "yellow journalism". After our Overstock.com article, Wales called us "trash".

Charles Arthur in The Guardian said that "Misplaced Pages, and so many other online activities, show all the outward characteristics of a cult."

In February 2015, a longstanding Misplaced Pages administrator was site-banned after Misplaced Pages's arbitration committee found that he or she had, over a period of several years, manipulated the content of Misplaced Pages articles to add positive content and remove negative content about the controversial Indian Institute of Planning and Management and its dean, Arindam Chaudhuri. An Indian journalist commented in Newsweek on the importance of the Misplaced Pages article to the institute's PR campaign and voiced the opinion that "by letting this go on for so long, Misplaced Pages has messed up perhaps 15,000 students' lives".

Scientific disputes

The 2005 Nature study also gave two brief examples of challenges that Wikipedian science writers purportedly faced on Misplaced Pages. The first concerned the addition of a section on violence to the schizophrenia article, which exhibited the view of one of the article's regular editors, neuropsychologist Vaughan Bell, that it was little more than a "rant" about the need to lock people up, and that editing it stimulated him to look up the literature on the topic.

The second dispute reported by Nature involved the climatologist William Connolley related to protracted disputes between editors of climate change topics, in which Connolley was placed on parole and several opponents banned from editing climate related articles for six months; a separate paper commented that this was more about etiquette than bias and that Connolley did "not suffer fools gladly".

See also

References

  1. Katharine Q. Seelye (5 December 2005). "Snared in the Web of a Misplaced Pages Liar". New York Times.
  2. Leonard, Andrew (17 May 2013). "Revenge, ego and the corruption of Misplaced Pages". Salon. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  3. Pinsker, Joe (11 August 2015). "The Covert World of People Trying to Edit Misplaced Pages—for Pay". The Atlantic. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  4. ^ Giles, J. (2005). "Internet encyclopaedias go head to head: Jimmy Wales' Misplaced Pages comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries". Nature. 438 (7070): 900–1. Bibcode:2005Natur.438..900G. doi:10.1038/438900a. PMID 16355180. The study (which was not in itself peer-reviewed) was cited in many news articles such as this: "Misplaced Pages survives research test". BBC News. BBC. December 15, 2005.
  5. Fatally Flawed: Refuting the recent study on encyclopedic accuracy by the journal Nature Encyclopædia Britannica, March 2006
  6. Nature (2006-03-30). "Nature's responses to Encyclopaedia Britannica". Nature.com. Archived from the original on 2006-11-05. Retrieved 2012-03-19. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  7. Wood, A; Struthers, K (2010). "Pathology education, Misplaced Pages and the Net generation". Medical teacher. 32 (7): 618–620. doi:10.3109/0142159X.2010.497719. PMID 20653388. We have identified Misplaced Pages as an informative and accurate source for Pathology education and believe that Misplaced Pages is potentially an important learning tool for of the 'Net Generation'.
  8. ^ S. Robert Lichter, Ph.D,,: Are chemicals killing us? Statistical Assessment Service, May 21, 2009
  9. Leithner, A; Maurer-Ertl, W; Glehr, M; Friesenbichler, J; Leithner, K; Windhager, R (Jul–Aug 2010). "Misplaced Pages and osteosarcoma: a trustworthy patients' information?". Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA. 17 (4): 373–4. doi:10.1136/jamia.2010.004507. PMC 2995655. PMID 20595302.
  10. ^ Clauson KA, Polen HH, Kamel Boulos MN, Dzenowagis JH (2008). "Scope, completeness, and accuracy of drug information in Misplaced Pages" (PDF). Annals of Pharmacotherapy. 42 (12): 1814–21. doi:10.1345/aph.1L474. PMID 19017825. Retrieved September 25, 2009. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |laydate= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |laysource= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |laysummary= ignored (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. Kräenbring, Jona; Penza, Tika Monzon; Gutmann, Joanna; Muehlich, Susanne; Zolk, Oliver; Wojnowski, Leszek; Maas, Renke; Engelhardt, Stefan; Sarikas, Antonio (September 24, 2014). "Accuracy and Completeness of Drug Information in Misplaced Pages: A Comparison with Standard Textbooks of Pharmacology". PLOS ONE. 9 (9): e106930. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0106930. PMC 4174509. PMID 25250889. Retrieved August 1, 2017.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  12. ^ Reavley, N. J.; MacKinnon, A. J.; Morgan, A. J.; Alvarez-Jimenez, M.; Hetrick, S. E.; Killackey, E.; Nelson, B.; Purcell, R.; Yap, M. B. H.; Jorm, A. F. (2011). "Quality of information sources about mental disorders: A comparison of Misplaced Pages with centrally controlled web and printed sources". Psychological Medicine. 42 (8): 1753–1762. doi:10.1017/S003329171100287X. PMID 22166182.
  13. Rajagopalan, M. S.; Khanna, V. K.; Leiter, Y.; Stott, M.; Showalter, T. N.; Dicker, A. P.; Lawrence, Y. R. (2011). "Patient-Oriented Cancer Information on the Internet: A Comparison of Misplaced Pages and a Professionally Maintained Database". Journal of Oncology Practice. 7 (5): 319–323. doi:10.1200/JOP.2010.000209. PMC 3170066. PMID 22211130.
  14. Azer, S. A. (2014). "Evaluation of gastroenterology and hepatology articles on Misplaced Pages". European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology. 26 (2): 155–63. doi:10.1097/MEG.0000000000000003. PMID 24276492.
  15. ^ Eric Randall (19 May 2014). "How a raccoon became an aardvark". The New Yorker.
  16. ^ Andreas Kolbe (2017-01-16). "Happy birthday: Jimbo Wales' sweet 16 Misplaced Pages fails. From aardvark to Bicholim, the encylopedia [sic] of things that never were". The Register. Retrieved 2017-06-04.
  17. history flow: results IBM Collaborative User Experience Research Group, 2003
  18. Fernanda B. Viégas, Martin Wattenberg, Kushal Dave: Studying Cooperation and Conflict between Authors with history flow Visualizations. Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, 575–582, Vienna 2004, ISBN 1-58113-702-8
  19. ^ John Seigenthaler (2005-11-29). "A false Misplaced Pages "biography"". USA Today.
  20. ^ Sage, Adam (June 9, 2010). "Ségolène Royal and Misplaced Pages duped by tale of anti-slavery activist". The Times. London. Retrieved June 17, 2011.
  21. ^ Charles Seife (2014). Virtual Unreality: Just Because the Internet Told You, how Do You Know It's True?. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 26–29, 32–34, 201. ISBN 978-0-670-02608-1.
  22. ^ McCauley, Ciaran (2017-02-08). "Misplaced Pages hoaxes: From Breakdancing to Bilcholim". BBC. Retrieved 2017-06-04.
  23. Anthony, Denise; Smith, Sean W.; Williamson, Timothy (2009-07-20). "Reputation and Reliability in Collective Goods". Rationality and Society. 21 (3): 283–306. doi:10.1177/1043463109336804.
  24. John Timmer (2007-10-18). "Anonymous "good samaritans" produce Misplaced Pages's best content, says study". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2007-10-27. Good samaritans with less than 100 edits made higher-quality contributions than those with registered accounts and equal amounts of content. In fact, anonymous contributors with a single edit had the highest quality of any group. But quality steadily declined, and more-frequent anonymous contributors were anything but Samaritans; their contributions generally didn't survive editing... The authors also recognize that contributions in the form of stubs on obscure topics might survive unaltered indefinitely, inflating the importance of single contributions...Objective ratings of quality are difficult, and it's hard to fault the authors for attempting to find an easily-measured proxy for it. In the absence of independent correlation, however, it's not clear that the measurement used actually works as a proxy. Combined with the concerns regarding anonymous contributor identity, there are enough problems with this study that the original question should probably be considered unanswered, regardless of how intuitively satisfying these results are.
  25. "WikiStats by S23 – List of Wikipedias". s23Wiki. Retrieved 2011-07-29.
  26. Besiki Stvilia; Twidale, Michael B.; Smith, Linda C.; Gasser, Les (April 2008). "Information Quality Work Organization in Misplaced Pages" (PDF). Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 59 (6): 983–1001. doi:10.1002/asi.20813. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-08-20. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  27. Angwin, Julia (2009-11-27). "Volunteers Log Off as Misplaced Pages Ages". The Wall Street Journal.
  28. Longo L.; Dondio P.; Barrett S. (2007). "Temporal Factors to evaluate trustworthiness of virtual identities" (PDF). Third International Workshop on the Value of Security through Collaboration, SECURECOMM. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  29. Fearnow, Benjamin (2014-01-31). "Report: Misplaced Pages The Top Source Of Health Care Info For Doctors, Patients". CBS.
  30. "Can you trust Misplaced Pages?". London: The Guardian. 2005-10-24. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
  31. "Supplementary information to accompany Nature news article "Internet encyclopedias go head to head"". Nature. 2005-12-22. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  32. ^ "Fatally Flawed – Refuting the recent study on encyclopedic accuracy by the journal Nature" (PDF). Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. March 2006. Retrieved 2009-06-30.
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  36. "Encyclopædia Britannica and Nature: a response" (PDF). Nature Press release. 2006-03-23.
  37. "Seth's Blog » Blog Archive » One-Sided Critiques of the Day". Blog.sethroberts.net. 2007-06-02. Retrieved 2014-04-29.
  38. "Seven years after Nature, pilot study compares Misplaced Pages favorably to other encyclopedias in three languages — Wikimedia blog". Blog.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 2014-04-29.
  39. See author acknowledged comments in response to the citation of the Nature study, at PLoS One, 2014, "Citation of fundamentally flawed Nature quality 'study'", In response to T. Yasseri et al. (2012) Dynamics of Conflicts in Misplaced Pages, Published 20 June 2012, DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0038869, see , accessed 21 July 2014.
  40. Roy Rosenzweig (June 2006). "Can History be Open Source? Misplaced Pages and the Future of the Past". The Journal of American History. 93 (1): 117–146. doi:10.2307/4486062. Archived from the original on 2010-04-25. Retrieved 2006-08-11. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help) (Center for History and New Media)
  41. "Survey of Misplaced Pages accuracy and completeness". California State University at Dominguez Hills. May 2006. Retrieved 2012-12-10.
  42. "Survey of Misplaced Pages accuracy and completeness". Larry Press, Professor of Computer Information Systems, California State University. 2006. Retrieved 2007-10-31.
  43. Michael Kurzidim: Wissenswettstreit. Die kostenlose Misplaced Pages tritt gegen die Marktführer Encarta und Brockhaus an, in: c't 21/2004, October 4, 2004, S. 132–139.
  44. Dorothee Wiegand: "Entdeckungsreise. Digitale Enzyklopädien erklären die Welt." c't 6/2007, March 5, 2007, p. 136-145. Original quote: "Wir haben in den Texten der freien Enzyklopädie nicht mehr Fehler gefunden als in denen der kommerziellen Konkurrenz"
  45. Bragues, George (April 2007). "Wiki-Philosophizing in a Marketplace of Ideas: Evaluating Misplaced Pages's Entries on Seven Great Minds". SSRN. SSRN 978177. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  46. ^ PC Pro magazine, August 2007, p. 136, "Misplaced Pages Uncovered"
  47. "PC Authority – 'Misplaced Pages Uncovered'".
  48. "Misplaced Pages: Wissen für alle" [Misplaced Pages: Knowledge for Everyone]. Stern. Vol. 50/2007. December 6, 2007. pp. 30–44. Einige Misplaced Pages-Artikel sind für Laien schlicht zu kompliziert, viele zu weitschweifig, urteilten die Tester.
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  56. Hwang, Thomas J.; Bourgeois, Florence T.; Seeger, John D. (26 June 2014). "Drug Safety in the Digital Age". New England Journal of Medicine. 370 (26): 2460–2462. doi:10.1056/NEJMp1401767.
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  253. O'Neil, Mathieu (March 2010). "Shirky and Sanger, or the costs of crowdsourcing". International School for Advanced Studies. 09 (1). Journal of Science Communication.

Further reading

External links

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