Wikipedia/External Links
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- Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner and consider archiving the URLs behind the links you provide. See also related web sources.
- Wikipedia - English-language version, including the Wikipedia Signpost, its community-edited online newspaper
Founders
- Jimmy Wales - personal blog of Jimmy Wales ("free knowledge for free minds")
- Jimmy Wales - Wikipedia userpage
- Larry Sanger - personal website
Utilities
- Article Traffic Stats - displays traffic per time for individual articles
- Trending Topics - list pages that were most frequently accessed over the last month
- WikiScanner - database of 'anonymous' edits on Wikipedia, linking them to various organizations by IP address
- Wiki Rage - multilingual site displaying articles with the most recent edits
Assessment
- David A. Hoffman, Salil K Mehra (August 26, 2009). Wikitruth through Wikiorder. Temple University Legal Studies Research Paper. Retrieved on 2011-10-20. Also in Emory Law Journal, 59 (2010).
Criticism and controversy
- List of Websites Critical of Wikipedia. Wikipedia Review. Retrieved on 2011-10-25. Some old links to criticisms of WP.
- Larry Sanger (Dec 31, 2004). Why Wikipedia Must Jettison Its Anti-Elitism. Kuro5hin. Retrieved on 2011-11-01. A discussion of problems inherent in the structure of WP.
- Wikipedia Watch - controversial, critical site by Daniel Brandt
- Wiki Truth - wiki edited by Wikipedians critical of Wikipedia
- Wikipedia Review - forums for critical discussion of Wikipedia
- A false Wikipedia 'biography' - USA Today editorial by John Seigenthaler on his experience of being accused via a Wikipedia article of involvement in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy An extended version is found here.
- Andrew Keen - blog by the author of The cult of the amateur: how blogs, MySpace, YouTube, and the rest of today's user-generated media are destroying our economy, our culture, and our values, a book which included criticism of Wikipedia. A recent article is: Andrew Keen (October 25, 2011). Wikipedia and the Internet grow up. The Telegraph. Retrieved on 2011-10-25. "The Wikipedia revolution was built upon the experiment of free crowdsourced content." "What is becoming increasingly clear is that the supposedly revolutionary orthodoxies of internet openness and collaboration are often excuses for invasive, dishonest and sometimes even criminal behaviour."
- Wikipedia—The Dumbing Down of World Knowledge — an article (from April 12, 2010) by Edwin Black on Wikipedia, expertise, vandalism and Google's search engine results pages
- Quote: "The Wikipedia concept, if turned right side up, could be a boon to mankind. Allowing named and credentialed scholars from around the world to collaborate in their area of expertise could revolutionize the speedy advancement of knowledge." Edwin Black (April 12, 2010). Wikipedia—The Dumbing Down of World Knowledge. The Cutting Edge. Retrieved on 2011-10-25.