Week8--Reliable Sources--LIUJUNYU
Reliable Sources
Summary:
In Wikipedia's editing system, "verifiability" is more important than "truth". This means that no matter what you add, it needs to be supported by a reliable third-party published source.
Wikipedia's criteria for "reliable sources" include: Has the source been published? Is it a formal publication (such as a book, journal, news media). Is there editorial supervision? Has the source been reviewed by the editor and has a fact-checking process. Is the author authoritative? Is the author an expert in the relevant field and is he signed? Is the content first-hand investigation or original research? Original content does not apply to Wikipedia. Is it a secondary source? Even if research is cited, third-party, independent analysis or comments should be used first.
Reflection:
In the Internet age, almost everyone has a platform to express their opinions. However, the standards of Wikipedia do not deny the value of individual voices, but emphasize that knowledge needs to be verifiable, traceable, and open and transparent. This set of principles is not only applicable to Wikipedia editors, but also worth learning from in our daily information acquisition: When reading news, have you checked the media source? Before forwarding information, do you know who the source is? We live in an era of "information explosion" and need to train our "information recognition ability".
Wikipedia has become the world's largest free knowledge base not only because it is "open source", but also because it has a seemingly insignificant but very important content review mechanism - the reliable source system is the core link. In a world where true and false information are intertwined and emotional manipulation is becoming more and more common, protecting the "credibility" of knowledge is more important than the speed of dissemination. This is not only the responsibility of the Wikipedia community, but also the basic quality of every information user.
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