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Transcript for Wikipedia: Truth in Numbers trailer 1

Time Content
00:03 → 00:06

Oh, is it an authoritative source?

00:06 → 00:09

A librarian would say it's not an authoritative source, because it's on the web.

00:09 → 00:12

They say: Oh no, we didn't mean that, there is stuff on the web that's authoritative...

00:12 → 00:15

It's not an authoritative source, because it's not peer-reviewed.

00:15 → 00:17

Oh wait, we didn't mean that, it's obviously peer-reviewed.

00:17 → 00:19

But, they're not peers we like.

00:21 → 00:25

We built the 17th most popular website on the Internet.

00:25 → 00:27

How have we done this? You've done it.

00:27 → 00:30

I've done it. We've all done it as volunteers.

00:30 → 00:33

Updated, in real time, by all of its readers.

00:33 → 00:39

The problem, of course, with Wikipedia, is that anyone can put their two cents in, and they do.

00:39 → 00:43

Wikipedia empowers people, they become authors of their content.

00:43 → 00:45

This is the Colbert Report!

00:45 → 00:48

You see, any user can change any entry,

00:48 → 00:52

and if enough users agree with them, it becomes true.

00:54 → 00:57

... compared an article from Wikipedia with Britannica,

00:57 → 01:01

4 errors in Wikipedia and 3 in Britannica.

01:01 → 01:05

The more eyeballs, the more people are able to fix things more quickly.

01:05 → 01:10

One moron and two CIA bureaucrats destroyed everything I had created.

01:10 → 01:15

The vandals, the trolls, the people who put in purposely misleading content.

01:15 → 01:20

They degrade Wikipedia's quality and its credibility, and we try to put a stop to it.

01:23 → 01:28

It has a huge community element like you're part of a very big family.

01:28 → 01:32

There's also a group of people who have an elitist edge to them.

01:32 → 01:37

They like the difficulty of the technology, because it keeps people out.

01:37 → 01:38

We are all working together for this.

01:38 → 01:42

We are all working together to create a better encyclopedia.

01:43 → 01:47

Internet Censorship

01:49 → 01:55

They fear knowledge which has the potential to lead to something.

01:56 → 02:00

It isn't about information getting into China

02:00 → 02:03

It's about information from Chinese people,

02:03 → 02:07

the Chinese point of view, being expressed to the entire world.

02:08 → 02:13

It's the idea that all these things I've read,

02:13 → 02:18

and I contribute will be free forever.

02:18 → 02:22

Newspaper's top-down, radio's top-down, television's top-down.

02:22 → 02:25

We don't have a say. Now, through Wikipedia collectively,

02:25 → 02:28

we write the history. This is totally revolutionary.

02:28 → 02:30

Democracy, freedom, justice, equality,

02:30 → 02:33

and all that stuff that they teach us in school.

02:35 → 02:38

Imagine a world in which every single person on the planet

02:38 → 02:42

is given free access to the sum of all human knowledge.

02:42 → 02:45

I don't think the work is ever done as long as the universe exists,

02:45 → 02:50

and that's gonna be around for at least ... well, depends.