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| '''"What is the point of the ''Citizendium,''"''' you might ask, "when Wikipedia is so huge and of reasonably good quality? Is there really a need for it?" | | '''"What is the point of the ''Citizendium,''"''' you might ask, "when Wikipedia is so huge and of reasonably good quality? Is there really a need for it?" |
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| | We think that, over time, ''Citizendium,'' can do better. |
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| |style="border:1px solid blue;"|<center>There is ''a better way'' for humanity to come together to make an encyclopedia.</center>
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| To put it forcefully: there is ''a better way'' for humanity to come together to make an encyclopedia. So we make this appeal to you. If we can do better than Wikipedia—or more positively, if we can pioneer a truly effective way to gather knowledge—then shouldn't we?
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| In response to this, a critic might argue: but you can't do better than Wikipedia. It has millions of articles, it is ranked #6 in traffic, it has thousands of very active contributors, and ''Nature'' did a report saying the accuracy of its science articles was not far below that of ''Encyclopedia Britannica.'' As the saying goes, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
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| {{TOC|Left}}But to make our case, we don't have to say that Wikipedia is broken. While different Citizens have different views about Wikipedia's merits, we agree on one thing: we, humanity, can do better. But why think that the ''Citizendium,'' in particular, can do better?
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| == We can do better == | | == We can do better == |
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| | Many Wikipedia articles are written amateurishly; often they are disconnected grab-bags of factoids, with no coherent narrative - and many have errors. In some topics, there are groups who "squat" on articles to make them reflect their own biases. There is no credible mechanism to approve versions of articles, so even if an article becomes very good, in time it is often degraded by many minor ill-judged tweaks. Vandalism is a headache—made possible because the community allows anonymous contribution. Many experts have been driven away because know-nothings ruin their articles: the community takes its dictum, "Ignore All Rules," seriously; it is part anarchy, part mob rule. |
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| |style="border:1px solid blue;"|<center>Wikipedia is full of serious problems.</center>
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| We do not think that Wikipedia is "good enough." Wikipedia is full of serious problems. Many of the articles are written amateurishly. Too often they are mere disconnected grab-bags of factoids, not made coherent by any sort of narrative. In some fields and some topics, there are groups who "squat" on articles and insist on making them reflect their own specific biases. There is no credible mechanism to approve versions of articles. Vandalism, once a minor annoyance, has become a major headache—made possible because the community allows anonymous contribution. Many experts have been driven away because know-nothings insist on ruining their articles. The community takes its dictum, "Ignore All Rules," seriously; it is part anarchy, part mob rule.
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| But even if you disagree with much of this indictment, you might still agree that we can do better. | | But even if you disagree with this indictment, you might still agree that we can do better. |
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| === Real names are better === | | === Real names are better === |
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| | By requiring real names, we give both our articles and our community credibility: if you look at our [[Special:Recentchanges|recent changes page]], you will see nothing but real names. Real names make it possible to enforce some modest, sensible rules, while Wikipedia's anonymity policy allows anyone who is slapped on the wrist to come back immediately under a new pseudonym. ''Citizendium'' has virtually no vandalism and little abuse of any kind. |
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| |style="border:1px solid blue;"|<center>The ''Citizendium'' has virtually no vandalism and very little abuse of any kind.</center>
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| By requiring real names, we give both our articles and our community a kind of real-world credibility: if you look at our [[Special:Recentchanges|recent changes page]], you will see nothing but real names. Real names also make it possible to enforce some modest, sensible rules, while Wikipedia's anonymity policy allows anyone who is slapped on the wrist to come back immediately under a new pseudonym. ''Citizendium'' has virtually no vandalism and very little abuse of any kind. | |
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| A community that asks its members to use their real names should be more pleasant, polite, and productive than one that allows abusive people to disrupt the community under the cloak of anonymity. We believe that in time, more and more people will come to see the merits of the ''Citizendium''policy.
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| === A modest role for experts is better ===
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| We too permit very open contribution; the general public make up the bulk of our contributors, as "[[CZ:The Author Role|authors]]." We agree that broad-based contribution is necessary to achieve critical mass as well as the broadest spectrum of interests and knowledge.
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| |style="border:1px solid blue;"|<center>A project devoted to knowledge ought to give special inducements to people who make it their life's work to know things.</center>
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| But we believe that it is merely good sense to make a special [[CZ:The Editor Role|role for experts]] within the system. A project devoted to knowledge ought to give special inducements to people who make it their life's work to know things. We believe—and we think our work so far bears this out—that a project gently guided by experts will in time be more credible, and of higher quality, than a project making no special role for experts. So we allow our expert editors to approve articles (creating stable versions, with a "draft" version that can be easily edited). Editors may also take the lead, when necessary, in articulating sensible, well-informed solutions to content disputes—disputes that sometimes go on interminably on Wikipedia.
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| To this there are a number of typical objections, which mostly rest on misunderstandings of our policies. Sometimes critics claim that our editors will inflict their personal biases on authors and our readership; but this is incorrect, as we have a neutrality policy that is, if anything, more robust than Wikipedia's. We are often asked, "But who will choose the experts?" Our answer is: why is this a problem? The "real world" has been solving that problem for a very long time, and [[CZ:Editor Application Review Procedure|our solution]] is typical. And sometimes people point to Wikipedia itself as evidence that no special role for experts is needed. We disagree: the amateurish and ever-vacillating quality of Wikipedia's articles is an excellent reason to establish a similar but better system that gives a role to experts. | | To ensure that contributors, whether to Citizendium’s knowledge base or to administrative functions, have registered under their real names, the Citizendium will employ a real names verification methodology appropriate to the applicant and as foolproof as is practically possible. |
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| | A community that asks its members to use their real names should be more pleasant and productive than one that allows abusive people to disrupt the community under the cloak of anonymity. We believe that in time, more and more people will come to see the merits of the ''Citizendium'' policy. |
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| === Sensible governance is better === | | === Sensible governance is better === |
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| | New ''Citizendium'' members, called "Citizens," must agree to our [[CZ:Fundamentals|Statement of Fundamental Policies]]. Moreover, we have "constables" who rein in bad behavior on the wiki. We moderate comments on the wiki in much the same way mailing lists and forums are moderated. If a Citizen is abusive, his comment is removed; if he shows a pattern of abuse, ''he'' is removed. Since we use real names, such abusive people cannot return under another name. |
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| |style="border:1px solid blue;"|<center>The ''Citizendium'' features the rule of law, not anarchy and not mob rule.</center>
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| New ''Citizendium'' members, called "Citizens," must agree to our [[CZ:Fundamentals|Statement of Fundamental Policies]]. Moreover, we have a group of mature, generally good-natured "constables" who rein in bad behavior on the wiki, and these community managers are limited in their authority. We moderate comments on the wiki in much the same way mailing lists and forums are moderated. If a Citizen is abusive, his comment is removed; if he shows a pattern of abuse, ''he'' is removed. Since we use real names, it is difficult for such abusive people to return under another name, reducing the administrative burden of so-called "sockpuppets". The upshot is that the ''Citizendium'' features the rule of law, not anarchy and not mob rule. Indeed, our Citizens get along pretty well, despite being very free to do or say almost anything—as long as it is respectful toward others. To Wikipedians, the experience of seeing such a peaceful community must be, again, bizarre but refreshing. | |
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| Currently, the ''Citizendium'' is in the [[CZ:Charter drafting|process of drafting a new charter]] which will codify and clarify how the site is administered in the future.
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| In the long run, again, we expect that the ''Citizendium'' will be recognizing as having the gold standard of sensible governance systems.
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| == Some personal motivations to support the ''Citizendium'' ==
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| But what about ''you''—why should ''you'' get involved?
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| |style="border:1px solid blue;"|<center>In time, the article you contribute to will be approved by an expert editor, and so represented to the world as containing a credible, reliable introduction to your topic.</center>
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| It's mainly because it is fun and rewarding to share your knowledge with the world. Your contributions to the ''Citizendium'' are less likely to be degraded by poor edits later on: others will move your contributions forward, not backward. In time (we can't say when—but eventually), the article you contribute to will be approved by an expert editor, and so represented to the world as containing a credible, reliable introduction to your topic. And all for [[CZ:Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0|free]]. We are accomplishing something truly worthwhile.
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| Many people, especially academics, are concerned that in a strongly collaborative project like this, they cannot get the individual credit they need. Well, you can already point people to the article history, where your real name will appear, crediting you with the specific edits you make. Also, we will soon probably start a pilot project that will allow people to be credited with their contributions on a "byline," under certain circumstances. And we hope to start a program soon where we will prepare an official report about your contributions to, and roles in, the ''Citizendium'' that you can submit to decisionmakers. Already, you can have the Editor-in-Chief or an active editor in your area attest to your activity and the quality of your work.
| | The ''Citizendium'' has a [[CZ:Charter]] which codifies how the site is [[CZ:Governance|administered]]. |
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| Furthermore, academics and other experts can submit what we call "[[CZ:Signed Articles|Signed Articles]]," presenting their own personal, but hopefully objective take on an aspect of an article already in the ''Citizendium.'' We add "Signed Articles" to a "[[CZ:subpages|subpage]]" of the main article—one of many different types of subpages a main article has. Those Signed Articles may be subject to reformatting and comments by Citizendium editors in the appropriate topic area, and to their approval for inclusion in the ''Citizendium,'' but remain the views and ideas of the submitter of the signed article.
| | == Some personal motivations to support ''Citizendium'' == |
| | It's rewarding to share your knowledge with the world. Your contributions to ''Citizendium'' are less likely to be degraded by poor edits later on. In time, the article you contribute to will be approved by an expert editor, and represented to the world as a reliable introduction to your topic. And all for [[CZ:Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0|free]]. |
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| Fun, rewarding, and worthwhile—what more could you want?
| | Furthermore, academics and other experts can submit "[[CZ:Signed Articles|Signed Articles]]," presenting their own personal, but objective take on an aspect of an article already in ''Citizendium.'' We add "Signed Articles" to a "[[CZ:subpages|subpage]]" of the main article—one of many different types of subpages a main article has. Signed Articles may be subject to reformatting and comments by editors in the appropriate topic area, and to their approval for inclusion in ''Citizendium,'' but remain the views and ideas of the author. |
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| '''See also:''' [[CZ:Myths and Facts|Myths and Facts]], [[CZ:Why I contribute to CZ|Why I contribute to CZ]] | | '''See also:''' [[CZ:Myths and Facts|Myths and Facts]], [[CZ:Why I contribute to CZ|Why I contribute to CZ]] |
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| {{Getting Started}} | | {{Getting Started}} |
"What is the point of the Citizendium," you might ask, "when Wikipedia is so huge and of reasonably good quality? Is there really a need for it?"
We think that, over time, Citizendium, can do better.
We can do better
Many Wikipedia articles are written amateurishly; often they are disconnected grab-bags of factoids, with no coherent narrative - and many have errors. In some topics, there are groups who "squat" on articles to make them reflect their own biases. There is no credible mechanism to approve versions of articles, so even if an article becomes very good, in time it is often degraded by many minor ill-judged tweaks. Vandalism is a headache—made possible because the community allows anonymous contribution. Many experts have been driven away because know-nothings ruin their articles: the community takes its dictum, "Ignore All Rules," seriously; it is part anarchy, part mob rule.
But even if you disagree with this indictment, you might still agree that we can do better.
Real names are better
By requiring real names, we give both our articles and our community credibility: if you look at our recent changes page, you will see nothing but real names. Real names make it possible to enforce some modest, sensible rules, while Wikipedia's anonymity policy allows anyone who is slapped on the wrist to come back immediately under a new pseudonym. Citizendium has virtually no vandalism and little abuse of any kind.
To ensure that contributors, whether to Citizendium’s knowledge base or to administrative functions, have registered under their real names, the Citizendium will employ a real names verification methodology appropriate to the applicant and as foolproof as is practically possible.
A community that asks its members to use their real names should be more pleasant and productive than one that allows abusive people to disrupt the community under the cloak of anonymity. We believe that in time, more and more people will come to see the merits of the Citizendium policy.
Sensible governance is better
New Citizendium members, called "Citizens," must agree to our Statement of Fundamental Policies. Moreover, we have "constables" who rein in bad behavior on the wiki. We moderate comments on the wiki in much the same way mailing lists and forums are moderated. If a Citizen is abusive, his comment is removed; if he shows a pattern of abuse, he is removed. Since we use real names, such abusive people cannot return under another name.
The Citizendium has a CZ:Charter which codifies how the site is administered.
Some personal motivations to support Citizendium
It's rewarding to share your knowledge with the world. Your contributions to Citizendium are less likely to be degraded by poor edits later on. In time, the article you contribute to will be approved by an expert editor, and represented to the world as a reliable introduction to your topic. And all for free.
Furthermore, academics and other experts can submit "Signed Articles," presenting their own personal, but objective take on an aspect of an article already in Citizendium. We add "Signed Articles" to a "subpage" of the main article—one of many different types of subpages a main article has. Signed Articles may be subject to reformatting and comments by editors in the appropriate topic area, and to their approval for inclusion in Citizendium, but remain the views and ideas of the author.
See also: Myths and Facts, Why I contribute to CZ