Extra posting: what makes information reliable? HanBin Bae
Wikipedia is an encyclopedia that everyone in the world can freely participate in, so it can damage documents and infringe copyright. Wikipedia has come up with several policies to prevent this.
First, it is a neutral perspective. Both Wikipedia's text and encyclopedic content should be presented in a neutral manner and fairly and unbiased manner by a trusted source.
Second, it is a probability of confirmation or verification. All Wikipedia's works are published from a reliable source and should be verified.
Third, it is a ban on the study of the reader. Independent research is a term used in Wikipedia, which means facts, arguments, concepts, statements, or theory that are not disclosed or published.
Wikipedia said, " It is not a dictionary, it is not a place to publish new ideas, and it should not be a venue for propaganda and publicity. Nor is it a blog or social networking site, a textbook to teach people, or a tool to predict the future.(J. J. Anderson, 2011)
Under this principle, Wikipedia's users are free to post knowledge and information on the Internet, which is always in an imperfect state and constantly adapted and supported process by other participants.
In other words, content quality is improved through the public review process.
With these rules within Wikipedia, reliable information may come up.
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