User:Econterms/Wikipedia is not doomed

From Wikimedia District of Columbia
< User:Econterms
Revision as of 19:30, 19 November 2014 by Econterms (talk | contribs) (draft grumpy blog post)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

A recurring theme in commentary about Wikipedia is that there are a declining number of editors. Many quit, especially after an unpleasant conflict, which is reasonable enough. Outside authors will sometimes infer that Wikipedia is doomed. Virginia Postrel's Nov 14 essay, presumptively titled "Who Killed Wikipedia?" explores that angle.

But, Postrel's mostly leaving out these forces going the other direction:

  • The existing editors have better tools over time, so they are more efficient/productive, (Visual editor, bots, gadgets, Huggle etc, vandalism research)
  • They do not have to invest all that much to maintain the content ("intellectual capital") that's been written.
  • A growing number of editors are getting some kind of professional credit or payoff for doing the work. (Heilman, Forsyth, PR people ; need other examples)

So, many editors are off on new adventures, experimenting, and adding new value sometimes. One is Wikidata which could raise the efficiency of the whole system, after some years of implementation. The overall system is growing, improving, and (I'm certain) not doomed.

In her essay, Postrel explains a lot about how Wikipedia works in a clear and mostly accurate way, so you get a sense of why it's not doomed, but she inserts the word "doom" here and there which may be a useful trick to make it seem publishable to editors. Essayists can use such tricks, more than scientists can.