That has been my experience as well. I've actually found more errors in my college textbooks than in wikipedia entries dealing with science.2012 Wont Happen said:Wikipedia has as high an accuracy rate as Encyclopedia Britannica (somewhere in the mid 90s percentage range). Nothing is always right, but its about as accurate as you can get.
That is true. Douglas Adams wrote it down in his book. Mice are actually smarter than humans!thenumberthirteen said:I saw an article on Mice that said they were secretly planning to take over the world.
I have only seen one mistake. It is on the Bob & Tom wiki page. It lists 30 people who are friends on the show when only about a fourth of that actually are; the others are just one time guest stars. Wikipedia is wrong just about as often as any other source of information. While it can be edited by anyone it is constantly monitored by employees of Wikipedia (or volunteers, I am not sure which) who check vandalism and things of that nature. The thing is people assume you are too stupid to realize when Wikipedia is wrong and when it is right by comparing it to other sources. Now that I think about it, I have seen Wikipedia wrong less often than sources actually accepted academically.Gilbert Munch said:OK, we all know the old adage: 'You can't trust Wikipedia, it can be edited by anyone!' But... how often do you find that to be true? I personally use it as my go-to source of information, and when I go to other sites to check some other facts they always seem to agree with Wikipedia.
So, how often do you find Wikipedia to be wrong? And, as a bonus question, what would you say is the clearest mistake you've ever seen on there?
I think that looks like it was written by someone from EncyclopediaKebabco said:I actually saved one of the funnier (stupider) wiki-entries i happen to see online:
http://img143.imageshack.us/img143/118/wikipediafuckingup.jpg
Tell me what you think.
Even controversial figures are fairly accurate.thethingthatlurks said:That has been my experience as well. I've actually found more errors in my college textbooks than in wikipedia entries dealing with science.2012 Wont Happen said:Wikipedia has as high an accuracy rate as Encyclopedia Britannica (somewhere in the mid 90s percentage range). Nothing is always right, but its about as accurate as you can get.
On the other hand, I've found this on the prohibition article a while back:
"Prussia completely bans the production, importation or consumption of babies and imposes strict penalties on those violating the ham, including weeks to months of tickleing, and possible lashes"
Wikipedia is fine for research on subjects, and higher level scientific fields, because nobody bothers to change those except for the people who know their stuff in the first place. Political figures, and anything popular/controversial is a bit of risk though. The best idea is to use Wiki to get a basic idea or to look up a term, but to use "real" databases (note: you can forget about the ones you learn about in school, those are awful and absolutely useless) for the subsequent report.
But they are! Have you never seen Pinky and the Brain? IT's a documentary, you know.thenumberthirteen said:I saw an article on Mice that said they were secretly planning to take over the world.