Gaming: Wikipedia Celebrates Its 25th Anniversary With An Ominous Warning...

Gaming: Wikipedia Celebrates Its 25th Anniversary With An Ominous Warning...

Is the very integrity of information at threat from generative AI?

"Everyone doubted it. Even today, people say that it works in practice but not in theory." On its 25th anniversary, that's what Wikipedia has to say about itself and the tale of its improbable success. Oh, and a warning about the threat generative AI poses to the integrity of information.

To mark the occasion, the online, open-source encyclopaedia that everyone can edit has posted a website dedicated to its 25th anniversary. The website recalls the origins of the online encyclopaedia, explains how it all works and looks to the future of both Wikipedia itself and the very availability of information.

It all started on January 15, 2001, running on an Intel Pentium 166 MHz processor. And it took off rapidly. By the end of 2002, Wikipedia says it already had "tens of thousands" of volunteer editors.

Today, the website says it has "65 million articles across over 300 languages, updated by nearly 250,000 volunteer editors, all of which are viewed nearly 15 billion times per month. That's nearing two views per month for every human on the planet."

As the quip we opened with above implies, the initial assumption was the Wikipedia was a terrible idea. Why would "volunteers" bother to write or edit articles for free? Surely the written quality and factual accuracy would be hopeless?

25 years on, the website stands as a testament to the power of open sourcing, and some would argue the wisdom of crowds. Getting there, of course, hasn't been straight forward.

As Wikipedia's 25th anniversary website explains, there have been plenty of debates about how to go about it all, how to manage information, what should qualify for a page on the encyclopaedia.

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"The English Wikipedia has had lengthy debates over whether Kate Middleton's wedding dress should have an article about it (yes), whether the "i" in "Star Trek Into Darkness" should be lowercase (no)," Wikipedia explains.

Source: PC Gamer