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thoroughburro | 3 months ago

My appreciation of Wikipedia has decreased as my own expertise has increased. A long way before I’m anywhere near an expert on a topic, I begin to spot misleading inaccuracies in its Wikipedia articles. Most often, information that is decades out of date — correct once, but now actively perpetuating old, inaccurate information.

If you’re relying on Wikipedia for more than discovery, be aware that you’re internalizing some amount low-quality or false information along with your layman’s view of the topic.

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jsmallberries|3 months ago

> If you’re relying on Wikipedia for more than discovery, be aware that you’re internalizing some amount low-quality or false information along with your layman’s view of the topic.

Where would you suggest getting up-to-date encyclopedic information?

thoroughburro|3 months ago

Wikipedia is fine for that.

My point is that “encyclopaedic information” is low-quality by necessity: there is no shortcut to truly expert information on a topic.

Too many have convinced themselves they can find expertise without joining an actual discourse of experts.

hawthornet|3 months ago

Perhaps someone could start an alternative to Wikipedia that allows people to register blogs and papers of experts on topics that an LLM could extract information from and that experts could be invited to edit and curate?