W5 blog topic: Can we trust Wikipedia? - Jong Hoon Park
2012047790 박종훈
What is important is that we don't trust
Wikipedia 100 percent, but we can trust it enough. Wikipedia is used by an
unspecified number of people and is guaranteed to be anonymous. In a way, this
word may not be credible. On the contrary, however, anyone can be trusted. As
of 2018, the world has so much information that it is called a flood of
information that most of it is based on the Web. Under these circumstances, it
is very important to selectively choose information to convey the correct
information. If you leave these tasks to a particular person, the quality of
information will vary greatly depending on the person's ability to do it. It
can also be expensive. Especially if he is an expert. However, if a large
number of non-specialized people like Wikipedia collect information, it is
dangerous, but it is also inexpensive, and it can be enhanced through a number
of discussions and disciplined discussions.
So Wikipedia has made great attempts, and
the result is not a bad success. Of course it is currently underway. I think it
is proof that many people are writing Wikipedia and are satisfied. On top of
that, the theme of Wikipedia's criticism and its article, " Article on
Relivable Sours, " has once again learned how efficient Wikipedia is in
these systems. Starting from the source of the information, Wikipedia has
focused on the problems of the past, times, academic issues, individual bias,
and biased information in many cases. This is one of the ways that Wikipedia is
trusted for many people. Of course, I learned about it from my professor and
learned about it naturally because it was one of the themes I learned in class,
but many people who were more interested in Wikipedia have come to believe in
these articles.
In particular, in the article ' Criticism
of Wikipedia, ' there were many cases and many interesting parts. There were
many issues to be considered, including political criticism, criticism of the
lack of scientific data, and the lack of factual checks in methodologies. I
started to think more about the bias myself, and I promised to be more cautious
about what I was going to do when I wrote the wikis. How about you guys that parts of you
are most likely to come into contact with and interesting?
I do not entirely agree with the idea that it is not costly when non-specialists gather a lot of information. Of course, there will be small costs on the part of information producers. On the part of the consumer, however, the more information produced by non-specialists, the more time-consuming they will incur to determine the facts and accuracy of the information. I think this relationship between producers and consumers makes Wikipedia unreliable enough. -JiWon Min
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