On 12/13/05, Barry Wellman <wellman@chass.utoronto.ca> wrote:
Re the analogy between restaurants and wikipedia by Jimmy Wales:
All the restaurants in Toronto must pass health inspection (food storage, etc.) and must post their pass certificate prominently near the outside door.
While health inspections are always problematic (inadequate measures, bribery, etc.), they do give some assertion that the steak will be steak and will actually be stored in a fridge with proper temperature.
True, but this is more like the regulations imposed against traditional media outlets, where the newspaper can get sued for libel for the actions one of its reporters. Just like the restuarant will get shut down if one cook doesn't follow health code. Wikipedia, and other web-sites with community contributed content, are not responsible (nor should they be) for the contributions of their users (at least in the US). This is the restaurant equivalent of a fellow diner walking by your table and spitting on your steak. Clearly the health inspector would not shut down the restaurant for such an action. - Cameron Jones Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign