If you had to define Wikipedia using only one word, what would you use? The answer is easy: crowdsourcing. It is the power of crowdsourcing (individual efforts that, summed up, make for a greater whole) that contributed to the enormous growth of Wikipedia, leading it to its success. However, anything has pro’s and con’s, and as such even crowdsourcing, a beautiful and effective idea, has its pitfalls. The dark side of crowdsourcing is just its distributed nature: if everyone can contribute, then also everyone can destroy. “Destroy” here is used figuratively: destroy the impartiality of the information. So, what can happen is that everyone can alter information according to various pulses, like bias, personal interests, commercial fa...
Wikipedia's first twenty years: how what began as an experiment in collaboration became the world's ...
Wikipedia is an ongoing endeavor to create a free encyclopedia through an open computer-mediated col...
Wikis have become enormously attractive to Internet users because they are open-access web pages or ...
If you had to define Wikipedia using only one word, what would you use? The answer is easy: crowdso...
Wikipedia is nowadays the primary source of general information to the public, the real number one i...
Wikipedia is well-known as the fundamental encyclopedia of our times, and has become the primary sou...
The online world has deeply changed the rules of information: a few selected systems have emerged a...
Information increasingly flows from smart online knowledge systems, based on ‘collective intelligenc...
Produção científica Integrada na investigação do doutoramento em educação, especialidade de educação...
Wikipedia represents ‘the sum of all human knowledge’ and is becoming the authoritative source on th...
Wikipedia is one of the most high profile and heavily used sources of information used by students t...
Wikipedia is often considered as an example of ‘collaborative knowledge’. Researchers have contested...
Wikipedia is often considered as an example of ‘collaborative knowledge’. Researchers have contested...
The following research attempts to understand the manner in which Wikipedia has contributed to the w...
Information increasingly flows from smart online knowledge systems, based on ‘collective intelligenc...
Wikipedia's first twenty years: how what began as an experiment in collaboration became the world's ...
Wikipedia is an ongoing endeavor to create a free encyclopedia through an open computer-mediated col...
Wikis have become enormously attractive to Internet users because they are open-access web pages or ...
If you had to define Wikipedia using only one word, what would you use? The answer is easy: crowdso...
Wikipedia is nowadays the primary source of general information to the public, the real number one i...
Wikipedia is well-known as the fundamental encyclopedia of our times, and has become the primary sou...
The online world has deeply changed the rules of information: a few selected systems have emerged a...
Information increasingly flows from smart online knowledge systems, based on ‘collective intelligenc...
Produção científica Integrada na investigação do doutoramento em educação, especialidade de educação...
Wikipedia represents ‘the sum of all human knowledge’ and is becoming the authoritative source on th...
Wikipedia is one of the most high profile and heavily used sources of information used by students t...
Wikipedia is often considered as an example of ‘collaborative knowledge’. Researchers have contested...
Wikipedia is often considered as an example of ‘collaborative knowledge’. Researchers have contested...
The following research attempts to understand the manner in which Wikipedia has contributed to the w...
Information increasingly flows from smart online knowledge systems, based on ‘collective intelligenc...
Wikipedia's first twenty years: how what began as an experiment in collaboration became the world's ...
Wikipedia is an ongoing endeavor to create a free encyclopedia through an open computer-mediated col...
Wikis have become enormously attractive to Internet users because they are open-access web pages or ...