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Mike Wesch

Official Google Blog: Encouraging people to contribute knowledge - 1 views

  • Knols will include strong community tools. People will be able to submit comments, questions, edits, additional content, and so on. Anyone will be able to rate a knol or write a review of it. Knols will also include references and links to additional information. At the discretion of the author, a knol may include ads. If an author chooses to include ads, Google will provide the author with substantial revenue share from the proceeds of those ads.
  • A knol on a particular topic is meant to be the first thing someone who searches for this topic for the first time will want to read. The goal is for knols to cover all topics, from scientific concepts, to medical information, from geographical and historical, to entertainment, from product information, to how-to-fix-it instructions. Google will not serve as an editor in any way, and will not bless any content. All editorial responsibilities and control will rest with the authors. We hope that knols will include the opinions and points of view of the authors who will put their reputation on the line. Anyone will be free to write. For many topics, there will likely be competing knols on the same subject. Competition of ideas is a good thing.
Mike Wesch

Wikipedia:Size comparisons - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • 282,875 contributors
  •  
    And we organize without material constraints ...

    3 tags and "it" is now "stored" in all 3 "places" at once

Mike Wesch

Image:Anonthenandnow.png - Encyclopedia Dramatica - 0 views

  • Note the differences. The basic being that one's a nigger.
anonymous

Video blog - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

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Mike Wesch

Streisand effect - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • An attempt at blocking an HD-DVD key from being published on Digg caused uproar when cease-and-desist letters demanded that the code be removed from several high-profile Web sites. This led to the key's proliferation across other web sites and chat rooms, in various formats, with one commentator describing it as having become "the most famous number on the Internet". Within a month, the key had been reprinted on over 280,000 pages, and had appeared in a song on YouTube which had been played over 45,000 times.[15][16][17]
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