Wikipedia
Wikipedia
My favorite Web 2.0 application is Wikipedia. When I first heard of it through my brother, I wasn’t all that impressed. After all, I thought, what kind of boring person wants to spend hours of their time pouring over the contents of some encyclopedia? However, not long after being introduced to it, I was hooked. It was so easy to get started on reading one subject and soon be clicking a link to read about a related subject. One query led to millions of possibilities.
What makes Wikipedia a Web 2.0 application is that it depends on its interaction with its users. Anyone can edit Wikipedia. There are over 9 million entries thanks to the active participation of its users, however it is the fact that it depends so much on its users that makes Wikipedia unreliable. There have been instances where people have abused Wikipedia and its honors system. One night, watching my favorite pundit-parody show The Colbert Report featuring Stephen Colbert, it became clear how this system could erupt in a wave of misinformation. Stephen encouraged all of his viewers to embrace “wikiality” and change the elephant page on Wikipedia to reflect that the elephant population had tripled in the past ten years, although it was a blatant lie. His devoted legion of followers did just that, editing the elephant page so many times that Wikipedia had to put a lock down on it. While everyone in Stephen’s camp, myself included, thought this was very funny, it just goes to prove that you can’t believe everything you see on there.