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Maybe They Should Call it “Wiki-Britica”

June 18th, 2008 @ 4:42 pm

4 Comments

Tags: Wikipedia, Wiki, Online Communications, David Weir

In the publishing industry, one of the oldest and most respected brands in the world is the Encyclopedia Britannica. It’s been considered the most authoritative encyclopedia for most of its 240 years on the planet, ever since it emerged during the Scottish Enlightenment, along with Adam Smith, Sir Walter Scott, Robert Burns, and James Boswell, among others.

But this month, the hallowed reference book announced a change that probably has its founders turning over in their 18th century graves. Through its website, Britannica is inviting users for the first time to contribute articles.

Before you can say “Wikipedia” I should hasten to add that any such user generated content will be reviewed by the company’s “expert editors” before it can be added to the site. This is consistent with the company’s oft-stated aversion to letting the barbarians through its gates.

It’s tempting to dismiss this as yet another case of “too little, too late,” whereby the old tries to adapt to the new, sort of. Taking another tack, however, Britannica would seem to have a historical archive ripe for digitizing. Among its contributors over the years have been none less than Sigmund Freud, Albert Einstein, Marie Curie, Leon Trotsky, Harry Houdini, H.L. Mencken, and W.E.B. Du Bois.

At least a few of those dudes would have made awesome bloggers. Even Henry Ford is credited with an article entitled “Mass Production,” though it is actually believed to have been written by his personal publicist.

In any event, don’t expect Britannica to compete with Wikipedia anytime soon when it comes to traffic or scale. Not that they’d listen to my advice (even though I am part Scottish), but I think the company should focus on establishing a completely searchable database of its past, rather than take one tiny baby step after a train that’s already left the station.

David Weir is a veteran journalist who has worked at Rolling Stone, California, Mother Jones, Business 2.0, SunDance, the Stanford Social Innovation Review, MyWire, 7x7, and the Center for Investigative Reporting.

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  • david@...06/20/08 Report as spam
    1

    Britannica's Legacy

    Britannica does have, surely, a huge library of past papers; that should be put online; worthwhile because often science and much dogmatic-established-canonical ******** derives because of ignorance of the history of the concepts, ideas and ideals that led to such false beliefs. Tracing the "why did this happen" --rather than just sticking to the last failures as though such are the prescribed ingredients of futures success -- can get creative results. We do need to see the history of the ideas that, otherwise, become axioms without being even common-knowledge folk-law in between.

  • hotweir06/20/08 Report as spam
    2

    here here

    I agree with your points.

  • lmadden06/20/08 Report as spam
    3

    RE: Maybe They Should Call it

    A completely searchable database of its past would be GREAT. One of my pet peeves is a poorly indexed book. Think how wonderful it would be to have access to topics from an historically reliable, respected resource. (Can you tell I'm a librarian?)

  • hotweir06/20/08 Report as spam
    4

    Thank you!

    Maybe if more entrepreneurs were librarians, we could see these things happen faster! :)

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David Weir

David Weir is a veteran journalist who has worked at Rolling Stone, California, Mother Jones, Business 2.0, SunDance, the Stanford Social Innovation Review, MyWire, 7x7, and the Center for Investigative Reporting, which he cofounded in 1977. He's also been a content executive at KQED, Wired Digital, Salon.com, and Excite@Home. David has published hundreds of articles and three books,including "Raising Hell: How the Center for Investigative Reporting Gets Its Story," and has been teaching journalism for... more »

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