Volunteers Log Off as Wikipedia Ages

by Allan Jenkins on November 28, 2009

Wikipedia.org is the fifth-most-popular Web site in the world, with roughly 325 million monthly visitors. But unprecedented numbers of the millions of online volunteers who write, edit and police it are quitting.

That could have significant implications for the brand of democratization that Wikipedia helped to unleash over the Internet — the empowerment of the amateur.

News Hub: Wikipedia Volunteers Quit

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Wikipedia is extremely popular with the public, but not so much with the volunteers who run the site. They’re quitting, raising questions about the future of Wikipedia, says WSJ.com Senior Technology Editor Julia Angwin.

Volunteers have been departing the project that bills itself as “the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit” faster than new ones have been joining, and the net losses have accelerated over the past year. In the first three months of 2009, the English-language Wikipedia suffered a net loss of more than 49,000 editors, compared to a net loss of 4,900 during the same period a year earlier, according to Spanish researcher Felipe Ortega, who analyzed Wikipedia’s data on the editing histories of its more than three million active contributors in 10 languages.

Wikipedia used to be about the information. Today, it’s a seething turf battle between “deletionists” and “inclusionists” — and pity the poor newbie who attempts to add an article or correct a mistake.

Posted via web from Allan Jenkins

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