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Wikiality — Part III

2007 February 20

Bit of an elab­or­a­tion on a pre­vi­ous post on the use of Wiki­pe­dia in . I cited part of a New York Times art­icle, which had in turn quoted from a let­ter to the editor from Pro­fessor Ken­neth Ryesky. The por­tion cited by the NYT art­icle sug­ges­ted that Ryesky was quite opposed to the idea, which wasn’t really the case. He was kind enough to some thoughts via :

In his New York Times art­icle of 29 Janu­ary 2007, Noam Cohen quoted a sen­tence (the last sen­tence) from my Let­ter to the Editor pub­lished in the New York Journal on 18 Janu­ary 2007. You obvi­ously read Mr. Cohen’s art­icle, but is not clear whether you read the ori­ginal Let­ter to the Editor from which the sen­tence was quoted.

Which exem­pli­fies the point that Wiki­pe­dia, for all of its use­ful­ness, is not a primary source of , and there­fore should be used with great care in the judi­cial , just as Mr. Cohen’s art­icle was not a primary source of .

Con­trary to the impres­sion you may have got­ten from Mr. Cohen’s New York Times art­icle of 29 Janu­ary, I am not per se against the use of Wiki­pe­dia. For the record, I myself have occa­sion to make use of it in my (though I almost always go and find the primary sources to which Wiki­pe­dia dir­ects me), and find it to be a valu­able tool. But in , as in any other activ­ity, one must use the appro­pri­ate tool for the ; using a sledge ham­mer to tighten a little screw on the mother­board of my just won’t .

Wiki­pe­dia and its equi­val­ents present chal­lenges to the sys­tem. I am quite con­fid­ent that, after some trial and error, the sys­tem will accli­mate itself to Wiki­pe­dia, just as it has to other text and inform­a­tion innov­a­tions over the past quarter-century.

Need­less to say, quite a dif­fer­ent tone than the excerpt in the NYT art­icle. Thanks for the cla­ri­fic­a­tion, Pro­fessor Ryesky.

related:

  1. Wiki­al­ity  —  Part II
  2. Wiki­al­ity
  3. Fair Use and the DMCA
  4. tak­ing the fun out of blogging
  5. Pre­texting, Eth­ics and Clients

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