Removed?

Walter Bright newshound2 at digitalmars.com
Tue Feb 15 00:24:55 PST 2011


Andrew Wiley wrote:
> No, they have a point. That philosophy doesn't work because at some
> point, there's too much information. Too much to edit to make sure it
> meets standards, too much to browse (if the links are bad enough to
> parody with the Wikipedia game, how bad would they be with unlimited
> content?). When you open that door, useful content gets drowned in
> floods of things like useless biographies and advertisements for
> things no one has heard of.
> If you take a look at the discussion for the notability requirements,
> no one really likes them, but no one has really found a better way to
> define what's notable than to require it to have valid sources.
> Without those sorts of requirements, Wikipedia becomes chaos.

I agree that pointless clutter can ruin Wikipedia.

One possible solution is to have a 'ranking' of articles, say 1 to 5 stars. A 5 
star article would be notable enough that it would be likely to be in a printed 
encyclopedia. A 1 star would be like a bio page on your neighbor.

Wikipedia searching then could be filtered by how many stars you want.

Any mechanical ranking system can be gamed (see the recent stories about link 
farms and Google), so it would have to be moderated.


More information about the Digitalmars-d mailing list