Budthestud
BAMF
So today I found a very misleading article on Wikipedia. Basically something that was supposed to be technical in nature was bluntly stated (misleading and technically incorrect because of it). I spent quite a bit of time trying to find more info on this from other sources because I knew that Wiki could not be right. Luckily I knew it was wrong, many people would just assume it was right or assume that society didn't know the real answer.
This got me thinking of how Wikipedia can tell you how reliable an article is so you know what you are getting in to and I was reminded of the jar guessing experiments. In those experiments the more people that you have guess how many jelly beans (or marbles or whatever) are in a jar, the more accurate your answer will be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n98BhnwWmsc.
I was wondering are the wiki articles that have more edits more reliable? It would definitely be worth looking into. If it is actually true then I think wiki should put some kind of reliability meter at the top articles.
This got me thinking of how Wikipedia can tell you how reliable an article is so you know what you are getting in to and I was reminded of the jar guessing experiments. In those experiments the more people that you have guess how many jelly beans (or marbles or whatever) are in a jar, the more accurate your answer will be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n98BhnwWmsc.
I was wondering are the wiki articles that have more edits more reliable? It would definitely be worth looking into. If it is actually true then I think wiki should put some kind of reliability meter at the top articles.