According to Wikipedia

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SoSueMe

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Does anyone else cringe when they read this in a story?

As handy as Wikipedia is, I still wouldn't quote it or use it as a source in a story.

The recent run of errors and deceitful employee(s) the company had working there, I just can't bring myself to use it as a credible source. Not to mention, anyone with a computer can ad anything they like to any category (i.e. The Vince-Carter-sucks-****-on-his-summers-off entry)
 
According to Wikipedia, Wikipedia is not a reliable source of information. It is more like an un-monitored message board where opinion or conjecture becomes fact.
I will use it if I need someone's birthday or something like that, but, inevitably, I double-check even that because you can't know where that information came from.
 
I "trust" it for the most basic things when cross/double-checking facts, and even then, with great care.

It can be a resource to at least help confirm something that's out there multiple times, or as a quick reminder for something. That's about it.
 
It's showing up now as a source in legal opinions, including at least 13 cases from the circuit courts of appeal just below the Supreme Court, and in law review articles:

http://www.concurringopinions.com/archives/2007/02/when_is_it_appr.html
 
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Why would you use wikipedia as a source when you will undoubtedly find dozens of other sources using a google search?
 
SF_Express said:
I "trust" it for the most basic things when cross/double-checking facts, and even then, with great care.

It can be a resource to at least help confirm something that's out there multiple times, or as a quick reminder for something. That's about it.

Yes, if it's a topic that I have some knowledge about and just need a memory kick-start. If it's a topic I know little about, then it's dangerous. It's amazing what I see there when it's an area of my expertise, all kinds of stuff that just isn't true.
 
Evil ... Thy name is Orville Redenbacher!! said:
I can't believe any legitimate news organization, college journalism professor or reporter would cite Wikipedia as a source!

It's simply not credible.

I agree. But in a story today in a (fairly) major paper I read a sentence that started with "According to Wikipedia . . ."
 
I wouldn't frown on "according to Wikipedia" in a light column, because it would be followed by "and you can take it for what it's worth," but never in a hard news story.
 
You guys are crazy. Wikipedia is a tremendous resource that is often accurate.
 
Seriously, I think Wikipedia is a good first place to go for background. Take the information there under advisement and verify. Not as a source.
 
Ace said:
Seriously, I think Wikipedia is a good first place to go for background. Take the information there under advisement and verify. Not as a source.
I can live with that, because wiki often links to the outside verification which is usually not subject to some unknown dude with an agenda trying to update history.
 
Anyone who used Wikipedia to find "facts" for a story is making a horse**** journalistic decision... and yes, I've seen it done and I've seen it burn reporters.
 
Evil ... Thy name is Orville Redenbacher!! said:
I'll stick with "google"

google isn't a resource, it's a search engine. it can lead you to sources that are just as spotty as wikipedia

ace is correct -- it's a great place to start and to gather ideas, but I double check everything I read on wikipedia
 

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