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How reliable is Wikipedia?


out of 10?

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8/10. They come with citations that you can always click. I deducted 1 point because not all citations will be reliable, and another point deduction for dead links.

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I'd agree with this.

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how about deducting 2 points because sometimes what the article says is completely different from what the citations say. Of course, stuff like this tends to happen on the less scientific articles.

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That's why I think you should always click the citation. The citations are there for that reason.

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Isn't the whole point of an encyclopaedia that someone else was meant to have read the citations and accurately summarized them?

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But you can't update encyclopedias unless you buy a completely new set. This allows the pages to constantly up to date.

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You mean constantly vandalized,

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Our encyclopedia deal came with 2 new books a year. A "Science Book" and a "World Book." They came with sticker books to add notation within the core set. What a fucking mess. We ended up with twice as many update books as actual encyclopedias. Things change too fast. Especially now.

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What a great way to make huge set of encyclopedias even bigger!

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It's good for getting a general summary of a topic, but the user-edited nature of the site makes it unacceptable for formal research.

Even so, it's a pretty good resource to scout for legitimately cited resources - although those need their own individual verification.

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8/10
You nailed it, I read a lot of true crime and American history stuff on Wiki, it’s generally close to the the reality but if I had to write a paper I wouldn’t cite it as a source

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good for movie info.

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Depends on the topic.

Discographies are great, they get a 9 or 10 from me. Example: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_Floyd_discography

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I agree, I often use it for discographies and filmographies, although I do find they are a little less accurate and comprehensive for non-American actors/musicians. Aussie artists for example can be quite bare-bones.

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AUSSIE ARTISTS?🤔...LIKE CROCODILE DUNDEE?

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lol wanker 😆

1986 called and wants its reference back

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7. Some articles are better than others.

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5

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For anything political or otherwise controversial? Very poor. But for things that aren't contentious they're usually ok.

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That’s a reasonable assessment.

Anything non-agenda/political driven seems pretty solid on Wiki
Way better sources are available but for a quick overview I like Wiki

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As reliable as the mainstream narrative is on every subject. It's Wikipedia's actual policy that they don't care about the truth; they only want "verifiability," which means that some mainstream source has to agree with what they are saying. This leads to situations where, for example, the actual person that a Wikipedia article is about can't correct information about himself/herself, and their "no original research" policy means you can't correct some bit of information that can easily be proven wrong by posting, say, a screenshot from a movie, or your own pictures of something you own that proves some of their information wrong, because that's "original research."

Then there's the bias of the "higher-ups" there, which results in absurdities like the article about corn being called "maize," even though hardly anyone calls it maize in everyday language.

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I'd give it a 6 out of 10. It's not hard to edit various topics and there have wikipedia edit wars between two people with differing views on a topic. Some political topics are locked to prevent crazy edits.

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-32412121

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