If you've ever spent time around Wikipedians, you've doubtless heard its motto: "Wikipedia only works in practice. In theory, it's a mess." It's a delicious line, which is why I stole it for my 2017 novel *Walkaway*.
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in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Cory Doctorow
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But this is one of those lines that's too good to fact-check. The truth is that there's a theory that very neatly describes how Wikipedia works; that is, how Wikipedia is one of the best sources of information ever assembled, despite allowing tens of thousands of anonymous and pseudonymous people with no verifiable credentials to participate in a collective knowledge creating process.
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Cory Doctorow
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Nupedia, Wikipedia's predecessor, tried to solve this problem by verifying its editors and establishing that they had the requisite expertise before allowing them to write encyclopedia entries in the domain of their expertise. This was an abject failure: not only was it so slow as to be indistinguishable from dormancy (Nupedia produced a mere 20 articles in its first year), but also the fact that these articles were written by experts did *not* mean that they were good.
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Cory Doctorow
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After all, experts disagree!
Wikipedia jettisoned user-verification in favor of *source* verification. It's impossible for a strangers to agree on the identity of another stranger, let alone what qualifies them to write an encyclopedia entry. Instead, Wikipedia has a process by which a *source* can be deemed noteworthy and reliable source, and a policy that assertions appearing on Wikipedia have to be cited to a noteworthy and reliable source:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedi…
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Cory Doctorow
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As I wrote for *Make* magazine in 2009, Wikipedia doesn't contain factual assertions so much as it contains *assertions about facts*:
web.archive.org/web/2009111602…
Wikipedia doesn't say "It is a true fact that Cory Doctorow is 54 years old." It says that a website called "Writers Write" published the assertion that my birthday is July 17, 1971:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cory_Doc…
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Canadian-British-American blogger, journalist, and science fiction author
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)Cory Doctorow
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There's no ready way for you to verify my birthday‡, but *anyone* can verify that Writers Write published this and claimed it was true.
‡ Unless, of course, you are my mother, who does read this blog. Hi, Mom!
Not only did this resolve otherwise unresolvable disputes, but it's also a tactic that got more effective as the internet grew, and more noteworthy sources were digitized and made readily available.
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Cory Doctorow
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A major milestone here was the creation of the Internet Archive's Open Library, which aims to scan and index every book ever published. That meant that the citations to print sources in the footnotes of Wikipedia entries could be automatically linked to a scanned page and verified by everyone:
blog.archive.org/2019/10/29/we…
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The Vast Blue We: Del Sol Quartet at the Internet Archive
blog.archive.orgCory Doctorow
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Wikipedia omitted a step that was considered indispensable throughout the entire history of encyclopedias - verifying facts - and replaced it with a new step - verifying sources. This maneuver is characteristic of many of the most successful online experiments: get rid of something deemed essential and replace it with a completely different process, suited to the affordances and limitations of a world-spanning, public, anonymous network.
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Cory Doctorow
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That's what eBay did in 1995, when (as Auctionweb), it created a person-to-person selling platform that neither verified the identities of buyers or sellers, nor did it use an escrow service that held money in trust until goods were received. Rather, it replaced these existing measures with a new kind of reputation system, whereby reliable sellers could be sorted from scammers by looking at their numeric scores.
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Cory Doctorow
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That's also what Kickstarter did. Kickstarter is based on a scheme first mooted by John Kelsey and Bruce Schneier in 1998, which they called "The Street Performer Protocol":
schneier.com/wp-content/upload…
In the Street Performer Protocol, a provider of goods or services announces that once a set amount of funds were pledged, they will deliver something.
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Cory Doctorow
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Think of a street juggler who wows a crowd with an escalating series of impressive tricks, before calling out, "For my final trick, I will juggle eleven razor-sharp machetes with my feet - but I will *only* do this trick once there's $100 in my hat."
Many people tried to implement this as a digital service before Kickstarter. They all foundered on a seemingly insurmountable hurdle: the sellers were raising money *to make the thing they were raising money for*.
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Cory Doctorow
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All the pre-Kickstarter platforms erred on the side of protecting buyers by holding onto the money until the promised goods or services were delivered. But because the seller needed the money to deliver on their promise, this repeatedly failed. It was a procedural vapor-lock: I can't do the thing until I have your money, but I can't get your money until I do the thing.
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Cory Doctorow
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So Kickstarter jettisoned the escrow step, handing campaign creators the full payout and then trusting them not to run off with the dough. The platform understood that this would allow a certain amount of fraud and failure, but deemed it worthwhile, especially after they took countermeasures to minimize backer losses, such as verifying sellers, subjecting projects to human review, and canceling any project that failed to meet its funding goals.
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Cory Doctorow
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(If you need the money to do the thing, and you don't raise enough money, then you will not be able to do the thing.)
In the Oblique Strategies deck, Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt counsel us to "be the first person to not do something that no one else has ever thought of not doing before":
stoney.sb.org/eno/oblique.html
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Oblique Strategies
stoney.sb.orgCory Doctorow
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That's what Wikipedia did when it swapped verifying facts for agreeing on sources. It's what eBay did when it swapped validating sellers and buyers for reviews. It's what Kickstarter did when it swapped escrow for acceptable losses, project review, and setting minimum funding thresholds.
Platforms may not know it, but they live by the "be the first person to not do something that no one else has ever thought of not doing before" maxim.
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Cory Doctorow
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They're forever removing seemingly load-bearing Jenga blocks to see whether the whole thing collapses. After all, it's certainly possible to omit a step and cause a catastrophe.
Kickstarter competitors like Indiegogo tried omitting the funding threshold restriction, passing any amount raised to the creator, even if it was too little to complete the project.
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Cory Doctorow
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After an initial blush of success, lost a lot of ground to Kickstarter, partly due to customers who felt burned when the project they put money into never delivered.
But that's not the only problem with "be the first person to not do something that no one else has ever thought of not doing before." Often, the new measure instituted to replace a former bedrock principle turns out to have critical flaws that bad actors can discover and exploit.
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Cory Doctorow
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So eBay's success conjured up an army of "reputation farmers," who sold a series of low-value items to the public (or to one another, or to alternative accounts they operated themselves), cultivating a high reputation on the platform. Once they reached this high score, they listed a bunch of high-value items (like dozens of $1,000 laptops) and absconded with the money.
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Cory Doctorow
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And Kickstarter's payment threshold isn't that hard to game: just set a very low funding goal, and you are guaranteed your money. Sure, the funding goal has to be high enough to satisfy a human reviewer, but for many items, it's hard to know exactly what constitutes a reasonable funding threshold.
Then there's Wikipedia. 25 years ago, it seemed easier for a group of strangers to agree whether a source was noteworthy and reliable than it would be for them to agree on a fact.
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Cory Doctorow
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But while that remains true, it did open up a new avenue of attack: bad actors who wanted to slip lies and spin into Wikipedia could switch from arguing about which facts were true to arguing about which sources were reliable.
That's exactly what's happening today, and it's the conflict that forms the spine of Josh Dzieza's lengthy, magisterial essay on the past, present and future of Wikipedia for *The Verge*:
theverge.com/cs/features/71732…
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How Wikipedia survives while the rest of the internet breaks
Josh Dzieza (The Verge)Cory Doctorow
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Dzieza describes how compelling the Wikipedia "facts about facts" approach is. It's such a sweet hack that it converted many Wikipedia vandals and trolls to editors in good standing, who switched from making Wikipedia worse to making it better.
But in an age of endless culture wars, conservatives have turned their sights on Wikipedia. Conservative publications are - empirically speaking - the most falsehood-strewn, conspiratorial branch of the press:
pewresearch.org/journalism/202…
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The Political Gap in Americans’ News Sources
Beshay (Pew Research Center)Cory Doctorow
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The fact that reality has a pronounced left-wing bias means that many popular conservative publications have been disqualified as reliable sources on Wikipedia, starting with the *Daily Mail* in 2017. This has the Maga right spitting feathers about "anti-conservative bias on Wokeapedia," and has Maga Congresstrolls demanding that Wikipedia unmask its editors and disclose their identities, a risk formerly confined to Russia, India, China and Turkiye.
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Cory Doctorow
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The emergence of this threat in the USA is a potential game-changer for the Wikipedia Foundation, which has long relied on its US domicile - and the First Amendment - to protect the core project from political censorship. Wikipedia's status as the best, most trusted source of information on the internet has painted a crosshairs on its back: leaked Heritage Foundation slides detail a plan to force Wikipedia to unmask editors who contribute criticism of Israel to the project.
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Cory Doctorow
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The Media Research Center has called for the Big Tech monopolists - Meta, Google, Apple, Microsoft, all openly allied with Trump today - to block Wikipedia until it agrees to treat Newsmax, OANN and other conspiratorial publications as reliable sources.
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Cory Doctorow
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Ironically, one of the things the right hates most about Wikipedia is that it takes affirmative measures to identify and correct its bias, for example, by actively encouraging editorial participation by members of minorities who are underrepresented in Wikipedia's volunteer editor cohort. Right wing demagogues call this "DEI," even as they demand that the government force Wikipedia to institute DEI for conspiracy-addled right wing trolls.
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Cory Doctorow
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As the saying goes, "When you’re accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression."
The culture war on Wikipedia isn't the only risk the project faces. Dictators around the world are obsessed with dominating Wikipedia. Dzieza describes how one anonymous editor in a Middle Eastern autocracy was summoned by the secret police, who ordered him to capitalize on his standing as a long-term Wikipedia editor to insert pro-regime materials into the encyclopedia.
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Cory Doctorow
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One of Wikipedia's great strengths is its structure. While Wikipedia started out as one of the internet's characteristic "benevolent dictator for life" projects, with founder Jimmy Wales taking on the role of "God King" of Wikipedia, Wales voluntarily walked away from his power, creating a nonprofit with an independent board (Wikimedia Foundation) and then handing his veto power over to an Arbitration Committee made up of volunteer editors.
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Cory Doctorow
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This was a rare and remarkable gesture. The internet has many of these "benevolent dictator for life" public interest projects, and nearly all of them are still controlled by their founders, who may be benevolent, but are far from perfect:
pluralistic.net/2024/12/10/bdf…
It's all the more remarkable that the internet's most prominent self-deposing benevolent dictator is Jimmy Wales, a self-professed, Ayn Rand-reading libertarian.
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Pluralistic: Tech’s benevolent-dictator-for-life to authoritarian pipeline (10 Dec 2024) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
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While many of self-described leftist benevolent dictators who preside over other key pieces of internet infrastructure decided that their projects needed the long-term control of their founders, it was Wales, a libertarian, who decided that a project of so much collective importance should have collective rule.
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Cory Doctorow
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But while Wales has stepped down as Wikipedia's God King (and its "single throat to choke" by the world's dictators and thin-skinned billionaires), there is something of his unique genius in the ethos of the project, and its ability to civilly bring together people of many irreconcilable viewpoints to collaborate on something they all value. I've known Wales for decades and count him a friend, notwithstanding the wide gap in our political philosophies.
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Cory Doctorow
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If you want to be a Wikipedian - and I hope you do - there are many ways to get started. The easiest is probably fixing punctuation errors and typos: when you come across these on a Wikipedia entry, click the edit button and just *fix 'em*, making sure to check off the "this is a minor edit" box before you hit submit.
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Cory Doctorow
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But for a more ambitious entree, try this method by veteran Wikipedian - and slayer of cryptocurrency bullshit - Molly White, who, in 30 brisk minutes, show you how to go to the library, find a cool book, and use the facts you find therein to make Wikipedia a better, more complete source of knowledge:
blog.mollywhite.net/become-a-w…
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Video: Become a Wikipedian in 30 minutes
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Cory Doctorow
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You don't have to be an expert in butterflies, hydrology or the Peloponnesian War to improve their respective entries. You just have to find a useful fact in a reliable source. Go ahead: be the latest person to do what no person (before Jimmy Wales) ever thought of not doing.
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Cory Doctorow
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disenshittification.org
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Cory Doctorow
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Image:
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File:Wikipedia logo (svg).svg - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.orgAiniriand
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