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Rise of the wikicrats (roughtype.com)
18 points by davidw on Aug 24, 2007 | hide | past | favorite | 4 comments


What will the next generation of social content look like then? Personally, I think the next "big thing" will be trust metrics. Wikipedia's challenges could be solved by a trust matrix.

If users were given trust values (think eBay feedback, but a bit smarter) and then users could in turn rate articles, that would at least partially solve some of Wikipedia's biggest criticisms (the content is unchecked and liable to spam / abuse).

Trust networks like that scale exponentially with the number of nodes (users and articles) so I suppose it would significantly increase the resources required to host something like Wikipedia.


Someone could do us all a service by presenting a talk called "A Practical Guide To Avoiding Internet Drama on Your Service" and offering advice on structuring discussion, interaction and administration to avoid problems like this.

My #1 suggestion: if you must have an "off-topic" forum, make sure it's clear that it's not the "no rules" forum.


So many startups gunning for Google; perhaps some should be gunning for Wikipedia -- which I love but seems at risk of retreating into paranoid orthodoxy in response to scaling and spamming threats.


One of the Wikipedia founders has created his own version:

http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Main_Page

The basic idea is to establish experts that review articles and guarantee the quality of the articles in their domain. Seems like an interesting idea.




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