Wikipedia is just an incredible thing. It is fact-encirclingly huge, and it is idiosyncratic, careful, messy, funny, shocking and full of simmering controversies - and it is free, and it is fast.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I think it's weird that the news cedes so much ground to Wikipedia. That isn't true in other informational sectors.
For all its shortcomings, Wikipedia does have strong governance and deliberative mechanisms; anyone who has ever followed discussions on Wikipedia's mailing lists will confirm that its moderators and administrators openly discuss controversial issues on a regular basis.
The core of Wikipedia is something people really believe in. That is too valuable for the world to screw it up.
People take issue with individual aspects of Wikipedia all the time. But it's kind of hard to hate the general idea of a free encyclopedia. It's like hating kittens.
Wikipedia is kind of extreme, where a very, very small group of people contribute pretty much everything.
Wikipedia was a big help for science, especially science communication, and it shows no sign of diminishing in importance.
Wikipedia, every day, is tens of thousands of people inputting information, and every day millions of people withdrawing that information. It's a perfect image for the fundamental point that no one of us is as smart as all of us thinking together.
Wikipedia is kind of weird. I feel it's lame to put up my own page, but I desperately want someone else to do it.
I think it's important never to look yourself up on Wikipedia. I think the temptation to correct any interesting factual errors would be too much.
Wikipedia is so dangerous.